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MIKE WOLFE’S “AMERICAN PICKERS” MOST INTERESTING PEOPLE • PL ACES • THINGS GIVE IT A SWIRL 5 WAYS TO DISCOVER TENNESSEE WINES ABC’S NEXT BIG SHOW?
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Letter from the Publisher Dear Readers, At a time when hard copy print publications are rapidly disappearing in favor of the ipad, iphone, kindle or whatever the next device may be that replaces print...it’s comforting to know that there is still a place for our annual coffee table newsstand guide covering music, sports, performing arts, visual arts and the literary arts. Each year we accept the challenge of bringing you the “Ultimate Guide” to the best Nashville has to offer in arts & entertainment. A simple concept, hopefully making your life easier...knowing you can go to one source for a refreshing look at all the entertainment options in our great city.
MANAGING EDITOR Robin Glover robin@glovergroupinc.com
After reading this addition, don’t hesitate to give us your feedback and send us your creative ideas for the next edition. Also, if you enjoy the magazine please follow us on Facebook and Twitter. (Be watching for our next ticket give away promotion available to our Facebook friends & Twitter followers.
PRODUCTION MANAGER Matthew Landon Glover matt@glovergroupinc.com
If you or your company are interested in advertising, please let me know. We offer a very unique advertising package that not only includes Nashville Arts & Entertainment but also all seven “Playbill” publications listed below. We are the only print publisher in Nashville that offers our advertisers newsstand exposure, and the finest venues where you have the confidence in knowing that your advertising message is actually being seen. No fast-forwarding, no channel surfing, and no distractions before the curtain goes up...everyone is focused on their “Playbill”. We are thankful for all our readers and advertisers...couldn’t do it without you! Enjoy! Gary gary@glovergroupinc.com
COPY EDITOR Gregory Rumburg CONTRIBUTING WRITERS D J Anderson Ashlan Williams Bonnell Anne Brown Melissa Riddle Chalos Larry Nager Deborah Evans Price Gregory Rumberg Phyllis Stark Sherry Stinson Lori Ward
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T I TA N S : FA I T H, FAMILY & FOOTBALL MIKE WOLFE’S “AMERICAN PICKERS” MOST INTERESTING PEOPLE • PL ACES • THINGS GIVE IT A SWIRL 5 WAYS TO DISCOVER TENNESSEE WINES ABC’S NEXT BIG SHOW?
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Table of Contents Mike Wolfe: The Adventures of a Treasure Hunter By: Deborah Evans Price Mike has been hunting for diamonds in the rough since he was 5 years old. When he was in second grade on garbage days he wouldn’t even go to school, instead he would haul loads of trash home, put it in the yard and begin picking. His mom asked what he was going to do with the stuff? Mike replied, “I’m going to open a shop.”
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Nashville Film Festival, Movie City U.S.A. By: Larry Nager
The festival is the highestprofile part of Nashville’s small but feisty independent film scene. This is a city known for country music, but country musicians have much wider interests than just country music. In fact, the first studio on what would become Music Row was a film studio.
Literary Arts By: DJ Anderson “Nashville is a magnet for talent and eccentricity. It’s where dreams come true.” There’s a story everywhere you turn in Nashville. Inspiration is drawn from the beautiful landscape, to the community’s great appreciation for art, music and literature. Discover again, or maybe for the first time, a collection of Nashville’s finest literary contributors.
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ABC’s Next Big Show? “Nashville” By: Deborah Evans Price Sometimes people can be skeptical of Hollywood’s portrayal of country music, but they don’t need to worry. “People are excited, it’s entertaining and an accurate portrayal. I believe this will show not only the cosmopolitan yet friendly nature of our city, it will also show the multiple facets of the personality of Music City and the music we create,” says Steve Buchanan, executive producer.
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Sacred Stages By: Larry Nager From hole-in-the-wall venues to an actual hole in the ground, here’s a look at some of the area’s best music listening rooms.
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Performing Arts By: Lori Ward The eternal search for love, a struggle between two conflicting forces of good and evil...whatever the story may be, TPAC, Nashville Ballet, Opera, Tennessee Rep and the Nashville Symphony do an incredible job of delivering New York-quality entertainment and creativity.
Give it a Swirl, Five Ways to Discover Tennessee-Made Wines By: Gregory Rumberg Pack the blankets and lawn chairs; fill up the picnic basket and head out to one of several Tennessee wineries offering free, family-friendly events seasonally. To whet your thirst, here are five ways to discover Tennessee-made wines.
37 Visual Arts By: Anne Brown
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NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
The most imaginative cities in history are marked by artistic creativity in art and music. Count Nashville among them. Read on to learn of the ambitious plans Nashville has to build on its already thriving arts community.
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COVER STORY
Letter from the Editor
Hearts of Gold By: Phyllis Stark
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Nashville’s stars are well aware that their fame and national platform can be tremendously beneficial to the charities they choose to support. Nashville celebrities claim their greatest milestones are tied to charitable work rather than their music.
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This year’s Most Interesting People, Places and Things list By: Deborah Evans Price, Ashlan Bonnell, Melissa Chalos and Phyllis Stark
Nashville Sports & Entertainment Faith, Family & Football By: Sherry Stinson
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Matt Hasselbeck has handled the news of being No.2 on the depth chart with great professionalism and there is no doubt Jake Locker is in great hands this season. Hasselbeck’s faith, family, his roller coaster journey to the NFL, and even his good friend and gun slinger, Brett Favre, all have brought him to where he is today.
79 The Annual Calendar of Events from Now Playing Nashville 102 Nashville Arts & Entertainment Tribute to Tim McGraw 8
NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Welcome to the seventh annual edition of Nashville Arts & Entertainment Guide, your creative resource celebrating the best Nashville has to offer in arts and entertainment. When we think of Nashville, music immediately comes to mind along with the many celebrities that call Nashville home. Our cover story, “Hearts of Gold,” takes a look at celebrities and their charities. I think you will agree this is just the tip of the iceberg of the altruistic nature of our community! Dierks Bentley summed it up best about giving back…it’s the right thing to do. As always, we have included your favorite sections: Nashville’s Most Interesting People, Places & Things starting on page 52 along with our exclusive monthly calendar of arts and entertainment events beginning on page 79. We hope you enjoy our unique editorial perspective as we bring you the best in performing, visual and literary arts along with a fun, entertaining look at the general sports and entertainment marketplace for Nashville. Thank you for reading . . . we value your input. If you have comments or suggestions, please send an email to my attention: robin@ glovergroupinc.com It is my hope that after reading this edition, we all will be inspired to give more of our time, money and resources to support the work of area charities. After all . . . it’s the right thing to do!
Enjoy!
Robin Glover
Deborah Evans Price has had the
Contributors DJ Anderson, a Franklin resident since 2003, finished her first novel, Mercy of the Fallen, shortly after moving to the Nashville area. This intimate portrait of a modern woman, torn between the life she has chosen and the road not taken, will strike a chord with readers in their fifties as in their twenties. Mercy of the Fallen is available in paperback on Amazon.com and to Barnes and Noble online members. There is also a downloadable version available. Visit www.authordjanderson.com for more information.
Lori Ward is the vice president of communications and community relations at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center, celebrating its 33rd season in Nashville. Her 14 years here have been the highlight of her career in public relations and communications for nonprofit arts and education organizations.
Ashlan Bonnell Born and raised in Nashville, Ashlan Bonnell is a sports and entertainment freelance writer and recent college graduate of Lipscomb University. She majored in English professional writing and minored in journalism and new media, focusing on sports writing, while holding internships at WSMV-TV, Titans Radio and the Nashville Predators. When not writing or cheering on her favorite team, Ashlan enjoys spending time with her husband, Andrew, as they enjoy newlywed life together.
Anne Brown, an innovative and influential arts professional and curator. Among her achievements, she has pioneered outstanding artistic initiatives, including The Arts Company on 5th Avenue of the Arts. She also taught at Fisk University, Belmont University and Vanderbilt University. She holds an M.A. in English and history and a Ph.D. in comparative literature.
opportunity to write about some of the city’s most colorful residents. In this issue, she reveled in the opportunity to profile some of her favorites, including Olympic gold medalist Scott Hamilton, Army Ranger turned musician and author Keni Thomas, singer/songwriter Phil Vassar and veteran music industry executive Randy Goodman. An avid viewer of the History Channel show “American Pickers,” Deborah thoroughly enjoyed talking to Mike Wolfe. Deborah lives on a hilltop just south of Nashville with her husband, Gary, and their son, Trey.
Larry Nager is a writer, documentary filmmaker, event producer and musician who lives in southeast Nashville with his wife, Marsha. In this issue he looks at some of the areas most unique listening rooms and talks to the folks behind the Nashville Film Festival, one of the country’s longest-running and most-respected cinematic events. Writer and digital media consultant, Melissa
Riddle Chalos has been writing about the music industry and even more interesting stories for most of her adult life. When not chained to her laptop, or procrastinating the same, she enjoys adventures down a country road with her ridiculously gracious husband, Philip. They live in Franklin, Tenn. Veteran entertainment journalist Phyllis Stark has been reporting extensively on the music industry for two decades. As a freelance writer, her work appears regularly in numerous publications and sites including MSN, Country Weekly and Radio-Info.com. She previously was Nashville bureau chief at Billboard magazine.
Ashley Hylbert
is a photographer specializing in portrait and commercial photography. She lives in Nashville, Tenn., with her husband and two children.
Like a quixotic Bruce Springsteen song,
Gregory Rumburg moonlights as a freelance religion, arts and entertainment writer and editor, clinging to the glory days he once enjoyed as the managing editor and resident curmudgeon of CCM Magazine. Now he works as a chaplain for the Nashville office of Odyssey Hospice, honored to serve women and men who are incredible life teachers. He is active at Vine Street Christian Church, enjoys sailing, a good glass of wine and practices at Sanctuary for Yoga.
Bret D. Haines has worked as a graphic designer, art director, graphic design instructor and freelancer in the Nashville area. Bret runs BaaHaus Design, a small advertising and design business, and he works with Habitat for Humanity of Greater Nashville as their senior graphic designer and production manager.
Matthew Glover graduated from Samford University in 2010 with a business administration degree majoring in business entrepreneurship. He handles information technology at Glover Group Entertainment, and also serves as project manager of Nashville Arts & Entertainment Magazine and for Lipscomb’s Business Magazine, which had a Spring 2012 newsstand release.
Sherry Stinson reports in this issue on Titans quarterback Matt Hasselbeck, and was surprised to learn after college Matt’s career as an NFL player was a question in his mind more than anyone else. “Once he made up his mind that he could compete in the NFL, he unfolded that great attitude and found his arm. He defines football with his spirit, work ethic and skill; he doesn’t let football define him. He competes at the NFL level and he is a really nice guy. Reggie White was a role model for Matt as Matt is now a role model for others.” Sherry left her post as managing editor of Nashville Arts andEntertainment this year when she moved to Omaha with her family. She stays in sync with Nashville as she continues her role as marketing director for Habitat for Humanity of Greater Nashville.
www.nashvilleartsandentertainment.com
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Adventures of a
Treasure
‘American Pickers’ creator and local transplant Mike Wolfe found a gem in Middle Tennessee, which inspired his work nationwide. By Deborah Evans Price
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NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Hunter
s creator and star of History’s hit cable show “American Pickers,” Mike Wolfe is well known for unearthing profit in unlikely places, pouring through basements, barns and all types of locales to find unique items to purchase and resale. However, for Wolfe the real treasure is not in the things he discovers, but the people he encounters along the way. “I like to tell people’s stories and to give them a voice. That’s why I picked up a camera and started filming,” says Wolfe, who travels all over the country with his longtime friend Frank Fritz and a camera crew in tow. “It’s really a show about all of us. I think one of the reasons it does well is because of the things that Frank and I find. They aren’t elitist. They are things that you still can find or you might have yourself.” It’s obvious Wolfe is a people person. He opens the door of his home in Leiper’s Fork, Tenn., wearing a big smile and cradling his beautiful infant daughter, Charlie. The unbridled enthusiasm and genuine warmth viewers see on the TV show is magnified exponentially when meeting Wolfe in person. He gently hands Charlie to her mom, his fiancé, Jodi Faeth, pours two glasses of lemonade and settles into a comfy chair outside on the deck to talk about his love affair with Nashville. He also discusses how he turned a passion for picking into a budding empire that includes the TV show, two Antique Archaeology store locations, a book (American Pickers Guide to Picking) and an upcoming children’s book for kid pickers. He even launched a new website devoted to encouraging children who like to pick (kidpickers. com). An avid country music fan, he’s also working with veteran producer Brian Ahern on an album tied to the show and has been writing songs with Dale Watson for the project.
Of Family & Mission An Iowa native, Wolfe moved to Tennessee in 2011 and opened a second Antique Archaeology. The
original store in LeClaire, Iowa, is helmed by Danielle Colby Cushman, who also appears on the show. The newest Antique Archaeology location opened in Nashville in July 2011 in Marathon Village on Clinton Street in the old Marathon Automobile factory. Both shops are filled with antiques and collectibles found during Wolfe and Fritz’s travels. “Nashville has embraced us so much,” Wolfe says. “The first day we opened our store at Marathon, the only way you knew it was there was Facebook and Twitter. It was 100 degrees that day and there was a line from my store all the way under the underpass of I-40 and then all the way up the street both ways. All day long people were coming in. Danielle and I stood there and signed autographs and thanked people. I can’t tell you how many people came up to me and were like, ‘I just wanted to come in here and shake your hand and welcome you to Nashville.’ They stood in line for two and a half hours to come in to tell me that. That doesn’t happen anywhere in America. It doesn’t. If I were to open in Atlanta or Minneapolis or Des Moines, it wouldn’t have happened. That’s how amazing this town is. People talk about the food, architecture and music, but it’s the people.” Wolfe recalls riding his motorcycle through Nashville several years ago and meeting a guy who invited him to Robert’s Western World for a beer. “I thought, ‘Oh my God! This place is so cool,’ and he’s like, ‘Hey if you want to go on a cool ride, meet me here at 9 a.m. and I’ll take you on a ride,’” Wolfe recalls. “So Jodi and I met him there and he took us out to Leiper’s Fork. I was like, ‘This is like a storybook out here.’ It was so beautiful.” The couple still has a home in Iowa, but spend most of their time—when Wolfe isn’t on the road— in Leiper’s Fork in their spacious home, nestled on seven beautifully wooded acres. “The guy that built it, Bill Powell, [has a] story very similar to mine,” says Wolfe. “He’s an antique dealer. He’s a picker
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first and . . . he started buying real estate. He started building stuff and he started using older pieces—old doors, windows—so when you look at the house there are a lot of things, like the front doors, that are probably 100 years old. It fit us perfectly.” And since his builder is a motorcycle collector, Wolfe’s passion for motorcycles was already part of his home’s décor. “The basement is finished so you could ride your motorcycle into it. When I saw that, I was like this guy was building this house for me, he just didn’t realize it,” Wolfe says. “Right when you walk in there is a 1905 Indian, which is amazing.” As Wolfe speaks, his dogs—Scout, a border collie, and Ruby, an Australian blue heeler— scamper up on the deck and settle at his feet. He and Jodi are both animal lovers. “We’ve done a lot of dog rescue,” he says, adding they’ve also donated items to be auctioned to raise money for animal rescue agencies. There are other causes that are close to his heart, including St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis and the worldwide children’s charity Operation Smile. “We’re going to do some work with Operation Smile because of Charlie. I’ll be the ambassador for Operation Smile,” he says, noting his daughter was born with a cleft lip. “We were fortunate that we were able to hire the best doctors and everything, but there’s still a lot of people out there all around the world [who] are born with clefts and they never get it fixed. Operation Smile helps thousands of people every year. One in 700 kids in American now are born with clefts.”
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NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
An Honest Lifetime’s Work Between his charity work, family life and filming “American Pickers,” Wolfe stays extremely busy. When the show is filming he’s on the road for two weeks at a time, searching for what he calls “rusty gold.” Wolfe admits he’s always been fascinated with what many simply consider junk. “I was doing this when I was five,” the longtime picker says with a smile. “My mom was a single mother. I used to walk to school because my mom was at work and they had those big garbage days. School was just a block away, so she would allow us to walk, but [on garbage days] I would not even go to school. I would just haul the stuff home, put it in the yard and in the garage. One time Mom came home and I had all these bicycles in the front yard that had been thrown in the garbage. I was probably in second grade. She asked, ‘What are you going to do?’ and I said, ‘I’m going to open a bicycle shop.’ Later in life I did, which was amazing. I did that for a number of years. I had three stores at one time.” Even as he ran three stores in three cities, Wolfe never abandoned his first love—picking. Eventually he dove into the picker’s life full time, and began thinking his on-the-road adventures would make a good TV show. “Nashville played a huge part in me getting the show,” he says. “I’m from a town of 3,000 people in Iowa and if you tell your friends you are pitching a television show they are like, ‘Are you serious?’” His friends in Nashville didn’t see the idea as so far fetched. “I was coming down here and doing business and I was seeing people that were living their dreams, whether in the music
industry, photography, video or art or whatever it was,” he says. “It was a very creative think tank down here. If people had an idea and enough gumption and people to believe in it, that would become law. When I came down here and I told some of my friends that I was thinking about doing this they didn’t laugh at all. They thought it was a great idea, so I started video taping myself.” Wolfe began compiling video tape of his exploits and putting together a treatment and a reel. It took four and a half years of pitching the idea before it landed on History. It debuted in January 2010 and has become one of cable’s most popular shows, airing on Monday nights along with “Pawn Stars,” a show that deals with antiques and collectibles brought into a Las Vegas pawn shop. “History bought my show and then just made them book ends with each other and all of our ratings started going crazy,” says Wolfe. “Then you saw a tsunami of all these shows come after us like ‘Auction Hunters,’ ‘Auction Kings,’ ‘Cash and Cari,’ ‘Picker Sisters’ and ‘Storage Wars.’ I feel really good about creating this category of television. It’s crazy. We still do great. We are at five million viewers every Monday night.” He and Fritz have been friends since eighth grade and Wolfe is grateful that he’s able to make a good living, traveling with his longtime friend and indulging his passion for discovering hidden treasures. “We’re so blessed, and the reason the show does well is because it’s a show about all of us,” he says. “I don’t care if you’re going to a garage sale, yard sale, estate sale or scratching a lottery ticket, you are looking for a good deal. Everybody wants a good deal and they want to treasure hunt.”
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Steve Buchanan
“Nashville” stars Clare Bowen as Scarlett and Sam Palladio as Gunnar
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NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
ith the debut of ABC’s new primetime television show “Nashville,” longtime Gaylord Entertainment executive Steve Buchanan adds an intriguing new title to his resume as one of the executive producers of the Music City-based show. “I felt like this was the perfect time to get a show done about Nashville and the music industry today that was a scripted show,” says Buchanan, president of the Grand Ole Opry Group. “If you look at the people that have been winning reality shows, there’s been a much greater presence of country music in the mainstream media.” Buchanan began pitching the idea for the show in early 2011. “I met with several different producers and I met R.J. Cutler,” he says of the TV producer and documentary filmmaker. “We had a similar vision of what we thought the approach to the show should be. We did a deal with Lionsgate Studios, [which] also shared the vision in terms of what the show should be, to shoot it in Nashville and try to make it as current and authentic as possible.” “Nashville” is being produced by Lionsgate, ABC Studios and Gaylord Entertainment. Buchanan shares the executive producer role with Cutler, who is also directing the series, and writer Callie Khouri, a former Nashville resident who won the 1992 Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for Thelma & Louise. “We formed a partnership with R.J. and then Callie came on board as our writer/creator to bring it all to life,” Buchanan says. “Nashville” stars Connie Britton (“Friday Night Lights,” “American
Horror Story”) as Rayna James, a veteran country artist whose popularity is beginning to fade. Her record company decides she should tour with upand-coming young artist Juliette Barnes, portrayed by Hayden Panettiere (“Heroes”). Conflict ensues as the two both seek to further their careers. The series will also star Powers Boothe as Rayna’s father and Eric Close as her husband. Clare Bowen stars as songwriter Scarlett O’Connor. “From the beginning we thought Connie Britton was perfect to play the role of Rayna James. She’s a great actress and someone who has many, many fans,” Buchanan says. “Both Connie and Hayden proved to be perfect for the roles they’re playing.” Being shot in Nashville, the city itself will play a key role in the character of the show. “The opportunity to provide exposure for the city, for our premiere properties and all the things that make up Nashville and Nashville’s personality is an extraordinary opportunity,” says Buchanan. “It was important from the get-go that we shot in Nashville. It’s amazing that we’ve been able to accomplish that. We shot all of the pilot on location around Nashville and will be shooting the series both on location and on a sound stage here in Nashville.” Though he modestly downplays his role, Buchanan has worked hard to bring the show to Nashville and shine a spotlight on the city. “I’ve been going back and forth to L.A. for several years and working on a variety of different projects,” he says. “It really takes perseverance, and it’s about the relationships you have, the ones you form and about the people that you work with. I started working with CAA [Creative Artists Agency] and
Driven with a passion for the city and paired with top Hollywood know-how, entertainment executive Steve Buchanan looks to set high Nashville’s star. By Deborah Evans Price
Hayden Panettiere as Juliette
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they set up a variety of meetings and were extraordinarily helpful throughout the process,” eventually linking Buchanan with Cutler and Lionsgate. His role as executive producer of “Nashville” broadens Buchanan’s already impressive skill set. He has a master’s degree in business with a concentration in marketing from Vanderbilt University’s Owen Graduate School of Management and spent three years as a booking agent at Buddy Lee Attractions before going to work for Gaylord Entertainment as a marketing manager. He’s now been at
Connie Britton as Rayna James.
“Nashville” was written by Callie Khouri (center) who is an executive producer along with R.J. Cutler (right) and Steve Buchanan. 16
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Gaylord 27 years. “It’s really a brand new world for me,” he says of working on the TV show. “There are an incredible number of really bright, intelligent, hard-working people in Hollywood who are absolutely fascinated and inspired by what goes on in this city. It’s great to see them come here and fall in love with who we are as a community and a city and what we do creatively.” He acknowledges people can sometimes be skeptical of Hollywood’s portrayal of country music, but they needn’t be worried. “In pursuing this, I felt like it was the right time and perfect time to sell such a project,” he says. “I also really believed it was important we do it right. The perception is frequently that Hollywood doesn’t really portray things accurately. I felt like while it’s a step in a new direction, it was also a step in a new direction that could really have some impact.” Buchanan says they showed the pilot to the senior record company executives in town and received positive feedback. “People are excited,” he says. “It’s entertaining and an accurate portrayal . . . I believe this will show not only the cosmopolitan yet friendly nature of our city, it will show the multiple facets of the personality of Music City and the music we create.” Nashville’s songwriting and publishing community is anxious to participate in the show. “We’re looking for songs that will help define our characters,” he says, adding that fans will be able to purchase music they hear on the show. For Buchanan one of the most gratifying things about working on this new project is seeing people fall in love with our city. “Everyone, from the actors to the crew, have just had such an incredible respect and appreciation and excitement about being here, from the Opry House to the Bluebird,” he says. “They’ve really loved the opportunity to be a part of all the great things that make Nashville so special.” Obviously everyone connected with the show hopes it will become a hit and run for years, but Buchanan has his eyes on even more. “I hope it gives people a much greater familiarity with what Nashville is all about,” he says, “and a consequence of that is that it impacts people coming to our city. . . visiting our wonderful attractions, eating at all the great restaurants and staying in our hotels. We’re hoping it engages people in our most famous export, which is music.”
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At the Bluebird Café (from the top down) Fred Eaglesmith Band, Vince Gill and Amy Grant, and Shelby Lynne.
Sacred Stages From hole-in-the-wall venues to an actual hole in the ground, here’s a look at some of the area’s best music listening rooms. By Larry Nager WE CALL OUR TOWN MUSIC CITY—AND WE MEAN IT. OUR most venerable venue, Ryman Auditorium, is known as The Mother Church of country music, for example. Yes, around here, people take the live music experience very seriously. But the best examples of listening rooms aren’t always the big, fancy places. Often they are the smaller, out-of-the-way spots—sometimes far from the honky-tonk tourist magnets of Lower Broad—where the décor may be an afterthought, but the P.A. system is top shelf and the music can be magical. Many locals have never visited or even heard of the following spaces, but these grand listening rooms draw devotees from around the world in search of the ultimate Nashville musical experience.
The Bluebird Café 4104 Hillsboro Pike Outside of Ryman Auditorium, Nashville’s next most iconic music space is in a Green Hills strip mall. The Bluebird Café is celebrating 30 years of launching careers for many of music’s greatest songwriters, plus giving a boost to mega-stars from Garth Brooks to Taylor Swift. People head to the Bluebird because music doesn’t get much more real than a songwriter telling why she or he wrote a song right before playing it. The voices aren’t often the ones from the radio, but to hear Don Schlitz do his hit “The Gambler” after telling how it was the first song he ever got recorded, or when Leslie Satcher belts out “When God Fearing Women Get the Blues,” that’s a night never to forget. 18
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In 2007, founder Amy Kurland retired and passed the torch to the Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI). And while most clubs owners’ mission is to get bigger, more profitable and eventually morph into a Margaritaville-style chain, Bluebird manager Erika Wollam Nichols says she’s there to keep it the same. Much of her job is saying no to the barrage of folks wanting to franchise the icon or move it downtown to the new convention center. “That would make it a caricature of itself, and that’s exactly what it can’t be,” Nichols says. “That’s why Amy gave it up to NSAI.” The Bluebird hasn’t changed much since songwriters Schlitz and Fred Knobloch came up with the crazy idea of performing in a circle, facing each other instead of the audience, the standard for today’s thriving performing songwriter industry. The venue seats only 100 people, and, with online ticket sales, many shows sell out within minutes. They can’t come all at once, but the Bluebird remains an obligatory stop for every celebrity (musical or otherwise) visiting Nashville. The braver ones will be coaxed up to sing. Brooks has returned, and music stalwarts Vince Gill and Amy Grant perform there a few times a year. And unless you’re performing, no matter who you are, you wait in line with everyone else. The early show is usually free; most late performances are no more than $15, all of which goes to the artists. The Bluebird keeps the bar and food receipts, which means despite all that fame there’s little fortune. Wollam
The Mavericks Reunion (top), and Raul Malo (below) at 3rd & Lindsley
Nichols and NSAI have come up with creative solutions, from running benefits for the club to offering individual chair sponsorships. Plus, there are outreach programs to check out, like a Bluebird Café stage during the Country Throwdown tour and the Bluebird on the Mountain series at Dyer Observatory. There are also offers of television deals, mostly from reality show producers who want to make a series out of all that human drama and great music. So far Wollam Nichols says she’s turned them down, though the Bluebird has been featured in such shows as “The Real Housewives of Atlanta,” and this fall the club has a recurring role in the ABC series “Nashville.” But all that network TV exposure won’t help the business side, Erika admits. “It’s going to make us famous-er,” she says with a laugh. “But it’s not like we can fit a whole lot more people in here.”
3rd & Lindsley 818 Third Ave. South One of the most eclectic listening rooms here is 3rd & Lindsley, which underwent major expansion this year, nearly doubling its capacity to 600plus. “The place was 20 years old and it needed some help. We just beat it up, outgrew it,” says Ron Brice, the venue’s owner. “But I wanted to do it right.” Brice didn’t just make it bigger, he made it better, improving sight lines and adding more sound and lights. 3rd & Lindsley recently hosted the two-night debut of the Mavericks reunion, back-to-back sellouts that drew fans from as far as Germany. On Wednesday nights the Wooten Brothers hold forth in a standing gig that draws jam band fans from all over. Mondays now belong to the aforementioned Time Jumpers, featuring both Ranger Doug Green (Riders in the Sky) and Vince Gill. And then there’s the occasional secret gig, Brice reveals. “You never know who’ll be here. Last Tuesday we did Toby Keith in a band called The Incognito Bandito, [Keith] with a bunch of local guys. No one knew about it, but it sold out. Word gets out in the music community. “My whole philosophy has always been make it a place I want to go myself,” he says. And Ron still books his favorite locals, from first-call sessionmen in The Players to world-class singers like Jonell Mosser and Mandy Barnett to gospel greats The McCrary Sisters. “They’re my friends,” Brice says. “I’ve been here 20 years, so you get to know ’em. That’s something all the best listening rooms seem to have in common. 3rd & Lindsley is more than a club. It’s a community.”
The Station Inn 402 12th Avenue South Closer to downtown, the Station Inn has the same status for bluegrassers that the Bluebird has for songwriters. A fixture of the neighborhood since 1978, The Station, as it’s known to regulars, has seen performances by everyone from bluegrass patriarch Bill Monroe to pre-teen prodigies destined for Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival. Country star Dierks Bentley says Station Inn changed his life. He was a college kid at Vanderbilt University when he attended a weekly Tuesday show by The Sidemen, young guys whose main gig was backing Bill Monroe, The Osborne Brothers and Del McCoury. “I was as green as could be,” Bentley recalls. “I was trying to find someone or something just to latch onto to try to
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better myself, find my path. The second I walked in the door I felt like I’d been transported into a totally different part of Nashville... I didn’t realize how relevant and how cool and how powerful that music was until I walked in there. It wasn’t just The Sidemen. It was the whole room, the whole community. It was just so much fun, and I became a fixture from that day on. For about seven years, I was there every Tuesday night.” The Station Inn isn’t all bluegrass, though. All-star western swing group The Time Jumpers owned Monday nights for 15 years until massive crowds forced it from the 175-capacity club a few months back. Mondays were taken over by Grammy-winning producer and banjo master Carl Jackson. The club also features the hilarious “Doyle & Debbie Show.” But mostly, it’s s the best bluegrass you’ll ever hear with a crowd that reveres the music as much as the performers do.
The Basement & Grimey’s 1604 8th Avenue South Performing at the Bluegrass Underground in The Volcano Room at Cumberland Caverns are Del McCoury Band (above), Dr. Ralph Stanley (below left), Civil Wars (below right), and Ricky Skaggs (bottom).
The community at The Basement, and its complimentary the record store/performance space, Grimey’s, is just as close-knit as the Station Inn, although the music is modern rock instead of traditional ’grass. The Basement hosts evening shows featuring young bands. Upstairs, Grimey’s, one of the last great American record stores, holds in-store appearances by a broader range of artists, from young groups showcasing in The Basement that night to internationally known groups like the Del McCoury Band, promoting new recordings.
The Volcano Room at Cumberland Caverns 1437 Cumberland Caverns Road, McMinnville Four years in the making, Todd Mayo’s place has all the other listening rooms beat. The Volcano Room has been millions of years in formation. Located 333-feet underground at Cumberland Caverns in McMinnville, Tenn., the space is where Mayo holds his monthly “Bluegrass Underground” shows. He was the first to see its potential as a music venue when he and his family toured the cave in 2008. “It was a real eureka moment,” he recalls. The cave’s owners agreed to rent the Volcano Room, which can seat up to 600. In August 2008, the SteelDrivers played the first “Bluegrass Underground,” returning for the fourth anniversary show this year. In 2009, Mayo and like-minded producer John Walker also started “Music City Roots” at the Loveless Barn, another must-see for music tourists. But Bluegrass Underground is unique and well worth the drive. Featuring legends like Ralph Stanley, Ricky Skaggs and Larry Sparks, as well as hot new bands like Sierra Hull and Highway 101, it’s a literally awesome venue. PBS broadcasts a weekly “Bluegrass Underground” show and WSM radio airs an hour of “Bluegrass Underground” at 5 p.m. Saturdays. “I knew it would be easy on the eyes,” Mayo says. “But it turns out that it’s just such a great room for the musicians. The sound is so good and it’s so intimate. “The whole idea was to be a really special place where the musicians would experience something they never had before and the same for the patrons.”
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Give It a Stonehaus Winery
5 Ways to Discover Tennessee-made Wines By Gregory Rumburg WITH THE LOCAL FOOD MOVEMENT IN FULL SWING—HAILING farmers markets, community-supported agriculture and community gardening—local beverages are making strides of their own, particularly when it comes to Tennessee-made wines. While the West Coast of the United States boasts a reputation for wines made from marquee-name grapes—Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Zinfandel—the more than 30 Tennessee wineries craft wines from grapes like Vidal Blanc, Seyval Blanc, Niagara, Chambourcin, Concord and Cynthiana/Norton, in addition to the Left Coast varietals. “They’ve got the fancy grapes. We can’t compete with those, and we don’t want to,” says Fay Wheeler, president emeritus of Stonehaus Winery in Crossville, Tenn. “For me, it brings out memories of being a kid.” Growing up in Jamestown, Tenn., Wheeler helped his family raise grapes for jelly and juice. He would go on to champion grape growing and winemaking in the state, earning the nickname “grandfather of Tennessee wine.” Though Southern wines, by reputation, are thought to be sweet, there’s no typical taste-of-Tennessee wine, says Dr. Tony Johnston, a professor of agribusiness and agriscience at Middle Tennessee State University. “Tennessee winemakers produce wines ranging from totally dry to very sweet, and everything in between.” Some fare better than others. “We’ve got more white grape varietals that grow well in Tennessee than reds,” Johnston says. “Our red wines tend to be much less hearty than those produced on the West Coast, which people misconstrue as being poorer in quality. I suggest people try our white wines. The reds are good, but many people are going to like the white wines better.” It’s easy to get started. Tasting rooms dot the state where visitors can sample wines produced on the premises and purchase bottles of their top choices, along with cheeses, desserts, gifts and knickknacks. To whet your thirst, here are five ways to discover Tennessee-made wines.
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Create a family experience Pack the blankets and lawn chairs, fill up the picnic basket and head out to one of several Tennessee wineries offering free, family-friendly events seasonally. “It’s an opportunity to go out to a place that has that wine country feel with the vineyards around and the views—all while listening to some great music from local artists,” says Kip Summers, the winemaker and co-owner, alongside country artist Kix Brooks, at Arrington Vineyards (Arrington, Tenn.). “There are times when [Kix] is behind the bar [of the tasting room] pouring samples! He really enjoys that, getting feedback from people about what they like and what they don’t like.” Summers describes Arrington’s Music in the Vines as “a unique experience and one of the most fun, inexpensive dates you can go on.” Likewise, Beechhaven Winery (Clarksville) boasts Jazz on the Lawn, one of the most enduring area winery events, while Century Farm Winery (Jackson) hosts Voices in the Vineyard. Start in the tasting room to discover which of the venue’s wines you like. Then, purchase a bottle to share socializing with family and friends outdoors over a meal. Many producers present occasional events, too, including the annual grape stomp at Sumner Crest Winery (Portland) and Friday night summer movies outdoors at Grinder’s Switch Winery (Centerville). The Winery at Belle Meade Plantation (Nashville) offers another family option—with a twist. Part of the historical Belle Meade Plantation, the winery was added three years ago, and a free tasting experience is included with every Plantation tour. “It’s been overwhelming! It has far, far exceeded our expectations,” says Sheree Kelley, the tasting room manager at the winery. She says winemaking at the Plantation goes back to at least 1820. Today it’s the only winery in Davidson County. Before visiting any winery, it may be helpful to verify hours and events. And, yes, Tennessee wineries can sell their products on Sundays.
Use this QR Code to download the free Tennessee Wine Country App for iPhone.
Plantation have keyed into. “The blackberry wine is a dessert wine, and it pairs very nicely with dark chocolate or raspberry dark chocolate,” Kelley says of the Belle Meade Blackberry. “Or, try it as an appetizer. Serve it with cheeses like Roquefort, sharp cheddar or other bold cheeses. It’s a fabulous pairing.” Wheeler says the Stonehaus Blackberry Summer works well over just about whatever one wants. “Around here we say, ‘Sweet wines be alright!’ Too sweet? Well, put it on your waffles, then.”
Sip a la West Coast The Winery at Belle Meade Plantation
Hit the Road Appreciate year-round enjoyment by crafting a day trip of area tasting rooms, and maybe a winery tour, also. The Tennessee Farm Winegrowers Alliance bundles some of the state’s wineries into three manageable wine trails. Discover where modern Tennessee commercial winemaking was born in Wheeler’s neck of the woods along the Upper Cumberland Wine Trail (communities north of I-40). Included are Stonehaus, DelMonaco Winery & Vineyards (Baxter) and Highland Manor (Jamestown), the state’s oldest winery, among others. The Natchez Trace Wine Trail, situated south of I-40, includes Amber Falls (Hampshire) and two that have winemaker Brian Hamm in common, The Winery at Belle Meade Plantation and Keg Springs (Hampshire). The Pigeon Forge/Sevierville area supports the Rocky Top Wine Trail, including Mountain Valley, Hillside and Apple Barn wineries. Downloading the Tennessee Wine Country app (free for iPhone and Android devices) can be a big help (although, disappointingly, the wine trails do not yet have their own button). The app can use current location to identify nearby wineries and to map a travel route, or make a weekend of it and explore by region. Neighboring restaurants and lodging may be located using the app. And remember: drink passionately, but drive responsibly. Please designate a driver.
Toss the grapes Sure, when it comes to wine, grapes rule. But by definition, wine includes fermented juice from other fruits, too. Grand Ole Opry member Stu Phillips owns Long Hollow Winery and Vineyards (Goodlettsville). Among the many varieties he makes, nongrape sweet wines are popular. “People love them,” he shares. “It just so happens I live near Portland, the strawberry capital of Tennessee. They grow beautiful strawberries there. There is something about the taste of strawberry wine that is absolutely wonderful. Add a little vanilla ice cream to it. It’s a popular wine.” Phillips adds that, traditionally, the South cannot do without its blackberries, something he and the folks at the Winery at Belle Meade
To get the range of tastes customers expect when they visit Tennessee wineries, area winemakers purchase grapes from the West Coast, then put their own winemaking philosophy to work to yield a unique bottle of wine, typically dry. “They’re brought in to us just like any grocery store brings in cherries from Washington or table grapes from California—in a refrigerated truck, like fresh produce. So the wine is made at Arrington, but the grapes come from different parts of the country,” Summers says of the acquisition. During a tasting, ask the winery associate where the grapes are sourced. For example, the Iroquois Red at The Winery at Belle Meade Plantation is a Cabernet Sauvignon from California’s Sonoma County. Arrington’s KB 409 is 80 percent Cabernet from Alexander Valley in Sonoma (a top locale), 10 percent from Red Mountain, Wash., and 10 percent from Arrington’s own vineyards.
Pop for a special occasion Sparkling wines—simply wines with bubbles, but not champagne, which is solely from a region in France—are on the rise from Tennessee wineries, Johnston observes. Think weddings, anniversaries and birthdays as a natural pairing. Stonehaus Winery has several options, winning Best of Show for its semisweet Tickled Pink at the 2009 Wines of the South competition. Arrington released its Sparkle 2010 to its wine club members, while the Winery at Belle Meade Plantation will soon launch its Riesling sparkling wine. For something different, many Tennessee wineries feature one of the South’s most treasured grapes, Muscadine, a go-to selection for Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners. Kelley says, “During the holidays, we sell a lot of Muscadine wine because it is fabulous with sweet potato casserole and turkey, dressing and all the trimmings. It pairs quite well, too, with milk chocolate and cranberry. It’s just heavenly.” And how about those fall football games? Wheeler says the unique Orange Squeeze wine from Stonehaus is emerging as a fan favorite among tailgating University of Tennessee aficionados. Whatever your palette desires, the only way to satisfy the taste is to get out to sample wines from a variety of places. “I try to caution people who visit only one winery and assume that all Tennessee wines will taste the same,” Johnston says. “If you don’t happen to care for one or another wineries’ wines, that doesn’t mean all the wine from the state is going to taste the same.”
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It’s a drama about the 44th Nashville Film Festival, one of the longest-running film festivals in the country. Though influential, it’s still trying to win major love in its own backyard.
By Larry Nager
he folks crafting the Nashville Film Festival (NaFF) aren’t sure if it’s the longest consecutively running film festival in the U.S. or just one of the longest. But they do know one thing: “We’re pretty sure that we’re the only film festival that started on the broad side of a barn,” says Brian Owens, NaFF artistic director. The year was 1969 when the late founder Mary Jane Coleman started the Sinking Creek Film Celebration at her East Tennessee farm, projecting movies on the side of a barn for a few friends. In 1972, she moved the event to the Vanderbilt campus and, by her 1997 retirement, Coleman had turned the project into a world-class film festival. Now known as the Nashville Film Festival, the event has an annual budget of $1 million, bolstered by presenting sponsor Nissan, along with Southwest Airlines, Xfinity, Gibson and Regal Entertainment Group. When the Opry Mills Regal reopened recently after the 2010 Nashville flood, it donated first-day ticket receipts to the festival. Even at the opening-day price of $2 a ticket, “We got a check for $17,000,” says NaFF Executive Director Ted Crockett. And they need it. It takes three full-time employees, 40 seasonal workers and 500 volunteers to run this growing, eight-day festival, which will commence again April 18-25, 2013 with the 44th edition of the event.
“We’ve really tried to stay true to a lot of the things that Mary started,” Crockett says. He quotes from a 1987 interview with Coleman stating her original vision, one that remains at the core of the Nashville Film Festival today: “Independents use film as an artistic tool and they express themselves in their films. I wanted the work of young artists to be seen. There was no independent film festival in the South, so I decided to do one.” And what a story it has become: The spring 2012 event filled six theaters at the Regal Green Hills Stadium 16. More than 200 films were shown to more than 25,000 attendees, including red carpet names like Nicole Kidman, Paul Williams and others.
Nashville light & sound Nashville has a long tradition of film production. In fact, the first studio on that would become Music Row was a film studio. In 1952, Owen Bradley, who would go on to help fashion the Nashville Sound, and his brother, Harold, started a film studio here, moving it to 16th Avenue South in 1955. Their famous Quonset Hut facility—home to some of the most iconic recordings by the likes of Ernest Tubb, Kitty Wells, Buddy Holly and Johnny Cash—was initially the first independent film studio there. Shooting in brilliant Technicolor, they produced some of the most important films
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Film Festival Screening
Brad Paisley and Kimberly Williams-Paisley being interviewed
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of that Golden Age of country music for movies and television. But sound recording proved a steadier, more profitable income, and Owen soon tuned in, which is why he’s in the Country Music Hall of Fame rather than the Motion Picture Hall of Fame. Still, the tradition of music and movies intermingling continues. The 2012 NaFF featured a variety of music documentaries, including the acclaimed Paul Emylou Harris, Kris Kristofferson Williams Still Alive, attended by the namesake artist and his brother, songwriter Mentor Williams (Drift Away). Nashville’s country tradition was showcased in two other films about music legends, Hank Cochran: Livin’ For a Song and Charlie Louvin: Rattling the Devil’s Cage. Today’s music scene was represented in the film Music City Underground, featuring 11 acts from the Carrie Preston, Nicole Kidman, Beth Grant, Famke Janssen next generation of Nashville musicians. Butch Walker: Out of Focus also brought the acclaimed rock singer-songwriter to town for a special sold-out performance at 12th & Porter. A surprise hit was An Affair of the Heart, focusing on the fanatical following of 1980s rocker and soap opera star Rick Springfield, drawing fans from all over the country. Brian Owens became the NaFF artistic director in 2009, moving here from Indianapolis, where he founded that city’s film festival. It was his job to pick the 2012 featured films, culling the roster from 2,839 entries representing 101 countries (he thanks his crew of pre-screeners for keeping him relatively sane). “I try to give everybody as much of a sampler platter as I can,” Owens says of his programming philosophy. “And like a chef, some of it should be locally grown. But some you can’t grow here. You can’t tell a French story in Nashville. So that’s where you want it to come from as many places as possible. I did feel the mix this year was one of the best.” Which brings us to the French story getting the most attention recently—The Intouchables, a comedy that has become a major international hit. Before its summer opening, NaFF attendees enjoyed their first look at the film and lauded it with an Audience Award.
Likewise, multiple Academy Award-winner The Artist also garnered a local premiere at the festival before expanding internationally. NaFF attendance has its privileges. And Owens? His screening never ends. Merely 12 weeks after the 2012 event closed, Owen had already received more than 400 entries for the upcoming festival.
Struggling for love The festival is the highest-profile part of Nashville’s small but feisty independent film scene, one fed by area universities and, of course, the music community. Support, too, comes from the Belcourt Theatre in Hillsboro Village, which shows new foreign and art films, as well as classics. Meanwhile, the Green Hills Regal Cinema slips in the occasional indie film among its presentation of the big studio titles. “This is a city known for country music, but country musicians have much wider interests than just country music, so they’ll support the other arts that they’re interested in,” Owens says. “Brad Paisley and Kimberly Williams-Paisley [Brad’s wife, an accomplished film and TV actress] have been among our strongest supporters. I think that’s one reason we have such a vibrant arts community across the board.” The diversity of Tennessee’s creative community was perhaps best illustrated this year by another 2012 NaFF Audience Award film, Beauty is Embarrassing. It’s a portrait of Wayne White, a banjo-picking Volunteer-state painter and sculptor who got his start in Nashville television. He went on to provide the surrealistic visual style for “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” and is now widely respected in the fine arts world. Crockett, who assumed his executive director role for the 2012 festival, has been associated with the event for 10 years. He notes NaFF wields sizable clout within the industry, is an Academy Award qualifier and a gateway event to such prestigious festivals as Toronto and Sundance. But locally NaFF still doesn’t get much respect. “I hear all the time, even from good friends: ‘Nashville has a film festival?’ We’ve had great coverage from the media, but it’s still one of the best kept secrets here.” With that in mind, but also as part of the organization’s commitment to film, Crockett (a distant relative of another Tennessee Crockett of coonskin caps and Alamo fame, Davy) is involved in several outreach programs, taking films and film production to at-risk kids and bringing film into hospital facilities as part of the Hope Tour. NaFF is also producing minifestivals in Knoxville, Chattanooga and Johnson City, Tenn., through its Tennessee Film tour, weekend-long events featuring Owens’ handpicked cinematic sampler platters. “We showed eight films on opening day either made by Tennessee filmmakers or made in Tennessee, and we’ll be taking some of that programming to the other cities,” Crockett says. It’s a plan that shows just how far this celebration of film has come since those days alongside Mary Jane Coleman’s east Tennessee barn. And it’s a hopeful sign this mid-south cinematic tradition will be projected well into the future.
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By DJ Anderson
Local writing talent abounds, including this sampling of the city’s resident literary writers.
“W h at a r e t h e t h r e e w o r d s y o u would choose to describe yourself?” This question, posed to five of Nashville’s resident literary writers, evokes a variety of succinct, descriptive expressions. Their answers, along with a brief introduction to their work and work ethic, leaves one agog at the multitalented personalities living in this town—our Nashville.
Braden Bell (fiction) The Three: amused, intrigued, comfortable For Consideration: The Road Show; Middle School Magic: The Kindling Working as an admissions officer and serving as a drama and choral director, Harding Academy’s Braden Bell must squeeze in time to write during morning commutes when his daughter is driving, during lunch times at school, between classes and during late hours after papers are graded and his children are settled down for the night. “I rarely write in large blocks of time,” he says. “Snippets” is how he describes the commitment he is able to make. Bell is quick to point out, however, that he devotes some part of every day to writing, even when “it’s a slog.” Bell and family moved to Nashville from New York where he, his wife and three children were living in a small apartment. It was a job with Nashville Children’s Theatre that brought them to the city where they “fell in love with the beauty, the lush green and the fireflies I now watch in my
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yard each evening. We love the food and the people,” he says. Bell was drawn into writing middle grade fiction (ages 8 to 12) by his professional surroundings. Since he spends a large part of each day with middle school students, ideas for stories that might appeal to the group are constantly popping into his head. The magic in Bell’s first middle grade series, Middle School Magic, for which he has an outline for four books in total, comes about when strange things start happening to a group of kids who then discover their teachers have magical powers. Even more surprising is when the kids discover that they, too, are magical. Whether Bell will get all four books published will largely be determined upon the sales of the first one. But regardless, Braden hopes that readers of his work find it fun and enjoyable because, he says, “It is fun to write.”
Marshall Chapman (nonfiction/memoir) The Three: creative, compassionate, courageous For Consideration: Goodbye, Little Rock and Roller; They Came to Nashville
With her origins as a songwriter harkening back to 1973, Marshall Chapman’s foray into writing books came 25 years later at the age of 50. Chapman recalls, however, that even as a third-grader she and a friend thought of themselves as authors. “We were both horse crazy, so our ‘books,’ which were nothing more than stapled construction paper with colorful crayon drawings and penciled text, were all about horses,” Chapman says. A teenage crush that encouraged her to go to Vanderbilt University is what brought her to Nashville. The people, her friends and that “anything can happen” feeling kept her here. “Nashville is a magnet for talent and eccentricity,” she says. “It’s where dreams come true.” Inspiration for Chapman comes while she’s doing other things like swimming, walking, driving or riding in car, on an airplane, dreaming or listening to music. The time commitment she makes “ebbs and flows and sometimes comes in one big crush,” Marshall adds. A monthly column she’s been writing for a couple of years helps keep her writing on deadline. “When writing my books, I go through disciplined periods where I wake up at 4 or 5 o’clock in the morning and write until noon for weeks on end. I’m not one of those writers who has to write everyday,” she says. When asked what she wants her audience to understand about her writing, Chapman replies philosophically, “I write because I want people to know it’s OK to be a human being.” Up next for Chapman is a new album of songs, tentatively titled Sexagenarian. “Most of the songs are about sex and death, which, according to the French, are pretty much the same.”
Tom Kimmel (poetry) The Three: obsessive, curious, soulful For Consideration: The Sweetest & The Meanest
Whether it’s poetry or songwriting, Tom Kimmel says, “People don’t like being preached to. It’s the listener’s experience and they have to be ready for it.” Kimmel started out as, and still is, a songwriter, which he says is also poetry. Growing up in a small town in south Alabama, he was in college when he realized what he really wanted to do was write, make records and perform. He started out in New England playing bars for a couple of years. “There were 10 performers for every available gig,” he says. It was a group of friends in a band signed with Capitol Records that led to his coming to Nashville, where his favorite thing is living in a city of artists. “I don’t care if it’s poems or songs. It’s not even about the music,” Kimmel says. “It’s about what the music is about. It’s about what the poetry is about. It’s about building connections and encouraging community and acknowledging our common ground and opening more and more to feeling and inspiration. If we feel deeply, it's harder for us to hurt each other.” Tom started slipping poems into concerts about 10 years ago. By doing so, he created a one-man theater. To his surprise, fans began requesting poems. After accumulating a number of pieces, he thought he had enough for a book so he approached a friend who teaches poetry at Belmont University. She provided support and valuable guidance for his work. And, it was through a Nashville Public Library fellowship program that he was able to devote the time needed to make his book a reality.
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Myra McLarey (fiction & nonfiction) The Three: vivacious, forthright, big-hearted For consideration: Water from the Well; The Last Will and Testament of Rosetta Sugars Tramble; The Road to Eden’s Ridge (co-written with Linda Weeks under the name M.L. Rose); When You Take a Pig to a Party (co-written with Kristina Nimblett); Moncrief: My Journey to the NBA “Storytelling is in my bones,” says Myra McLarey, whose eclectic body of work is a testament to her broad range of abilities, including literary fiction, romance, children’s literature and nonfiction. When McLarey arrived in Nashville the summer of 2003, she was straight from teaching writing in Harvard’s extension program and Water from the Well was enjoying a resurgence due to a paperback printing. But, writing is not what brought McLarey to Music City. “I have always considered myself a teacher more than any other identity,” says McLarey, who was hired to design the English program for Ensworth’s nascent high school and then chair the department during its first five years. As a full-time English literature teacher, McLarey explains that during the school year, with the student papers to give time and attention to, there’s not much time left for writing. That is why she looks forward to gaps between assignments, school year vacations and summer. It is during these times that she becomes a full-time writer. “I am someone who needs hours before me when I write. I often write for several hours without even realizing it,” she says. When asked what she’s working on right now, McLarey says that she’s currently “writing in my head and trying to find the first sentence.” Though she tells her students to “just start,” she feels the need to have the first line before she starts typing. “I’ve been thinking about writing about several generations of women in Iowa and have already done some research. I’m ready for that first sentence to hit me in the face.” A close friend of McLarey’s weighs in with what he thinks is the most interesting thing about her: “She can hold her own in discussing football, politics, economics, literature . . . and Plato or Pearl Jam.” McLarey counters, “He’s wrong about Pearl Jam, but I’ll take it.”
Alice Randall (fiction) The Three: mama, novelist, hostess For consideration: The Wind Done Gone; Pushkin and the Queen of Spades; Rebel Yell; Ada’s Rules Alice Randall is a born novelist. Even before she began reading at the age of three, she recalls wanting to be a writer. “I still remember the very first word I ever wrote,” she says. Though she wasn’t even sure if her curly cursive scribbling was a word, her shocked grandmother exclaimed, “Yellow!” when she saw what young Alice had written. This both pleased and shocked her as well. She attributes this very early feeling of success as the first of many more. Randall “up and moved to Nashville” after writing the bones of what would be, two years later, with polishing by Mark Sanders, her first recorded country song, “Reckless Night.” “I felt so good about it even before it was finished.” Her “crazy plan” to write country songs as a means of supporting herself while she learned to write novels worked. And what’s more, the move galvanized her decision to write about the South and embrace this town as her home. “Nashville is a great music town, but it’s a great university town as well—Fisk, Meharry, Vanderbilt, Belmont, Lipscomb and Tennessee State. And Nashville is a great food town,” she adds. “What’s better than a city full of artists, brainiacs, healers and chefs?” Except for a few odd jobs during the first months out of college, Randall has been a full-time writer all her life. “I write off and on all day long most days of the week,” she says. “When I was a girl my father told me he wanted me to speak for those who could not speak for themselves. I think that is a big part of what I do as a novelist. I give voice on paper to women who have been silenced or speak but go unheard.” Never one to let much time go by between projects, Randall is currently collaborating with daughter Caroline Randall Williams on a chapter book—The Diary of B.B. Bright, Possible Princess—due out in October. With literary roots to Arna Bontemps (Caroline’s great-grandfather who is widely acknowledged as the father of the African-American children’s book), mother and daughter agree, “He would be very proud of our creation.”
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NASHVILLE SYMPHONY
EXPERIENCE IT. Smokey Robinson February 14 - 15, 2013
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Chris Isaak September 11, 2012
Randy Travis March 7 - 9, 2013
Looks Like a
Five-star Season ✯✯✯✯✯
By Lori Ward
Nashville Rivals New York for Quality Entertainment ANCHORED BY THE WORK OF THREE PROFESSIONAL RESIDENT companies and a series of Broadway tours, Nashville audiences enjoy tremendous variety in art and entertainment at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center (TPAC). The leadership of Nashville Ballet, Nashville Opera, Tennessee Repertory Theatre and TPAC share their top picks for the upcoming season, exclusively for Nashville Arts & Entertainment. HCA/TriStar Health Broadway at TPAC
Traces TPAC’s Andrew Jackson Hall February 19-24, 2013 For the Tennessee Performing Arts Center no one work— including the blockbuster The Lion King, returning to Nashville in May 2013—can define Broadway. TPAC’s annual series is just as likely to include shows as varied as Riverdance, Stomp, Rain and Blue Man Group, all big hits in New York and Nashville. Traces is that new and unique show popping up on Broadway seasons across the country, and it’s coming to TPAC. Young, multitalented cast members perform amazing, athletic feats in the tradition of Cirque du Soleil and Olympic-class gymnastic ability. Currently a hit in New York, the production has enjoyed success with limited engagements in other cities, prompting the national tour.
“I love this show and I love bringing this kind of a tour to Nashville and Tennessee,” says Kathleen O’Brien, TPAC’s president and chief executive officer. “Many of our audience members will otherwise not have the opportunity to see the latest, popular take on what Broadway entertainment can be. It’s fresh, fun and highly Kathleen O’Brien entertaining—appropriate for the whole family.” Traces was developed in Montreal and features an international cast of accomplished gymnasts who double as actors, musicians and athletes incorporating into the show skateboards, basketballs, large hoops, trapeze rope, a diving board and tumbling mats. Music and giant projections complement the non-stop action as the characters share their stories and interact with each other. “The 90-minute performance, without intermission, is breathtaking, intense, stunning,” O’Brien says. “You have to see to believe. Audiences of all ages—often three generations attending together—are completely engaged in the show, connecting with the characters and cheering them on.”
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NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Traces
Nashville Opera
Madame Butterfly TPAC’s Andrew Jackson Hall October 11 & 13, 2012 Every year TPAC audiences also experience the finest in international opera, from classics to cutting edge premieres. The opener to another diverse season from Nashville Opera is Madame Butterfly, featuring worldrenowned artists, the Nashville Symphony, Tennessee singers in the chorus and a locally-cast child performer. Detailed, authentic costumes and scenic design recreate Japan in the early 1900s for the story about Cio-Cio San or “Butterfly,” the geisha who abandons faith and family for a dashing American Navy officer. The internationally known Japanese star Jee Hyn Lim and handsome young tenor Cody Austin play the leading roles. Since it was penned by Puccini over 100 years ago, Madame Butterfly, has been performed every year around the world. Inspiring the Broadway musical Miss Saigon, it’s the first opera many experienced as children or young adults—and Madame Butterfly see again and again over their lifetimes. “ Madame Butterfly is one of my own favorites to produce for its very humanity. The characters are well-drawn, the emotions are pure, and there is no layer between the show and the audience,” says John Hoomes, Nashville Opera’s artistic director. “From the moment Madame Butterfly begins, the John Hoomes audience is involved in the drama and the music. They are a part of the action. Especially if you love Broadway, this opera will speak to you. It is so accessible. Hoomes notes English subtitles are projected above the stage during the performance. The opera will showcase the extravagant, exotic look of the time and place with the full, museum-quality re-creation of a Japanese house and garden, sliding paper walls and all. Most of the female characters are geishas in exquisite, colorful silks and make-up.
Tennessee Repertory Theatre
Clyborne Park September 8-22, 2012 The Columnist April 20-May 4, 2013 TPAC’s Andrew Johnson Theater Wow—Nashville audiences will be the first to see The Columnist by David Auburn outside of New York City and will be among the first to receive the rights for Clybourne Park since it earned huge success on Broadway. Congratulations to Tennessee Repertory Theatre for setting the stage to produce both of these plays for local residents!
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Each tells an electrifying story with a blend of drama, humor, and suspense. The Columnist takes audiences into the world of Joseph Alsop, the most powerful journalist in America from the 1930s to ’70s. Clybourne Park tells two gripping tales—what happens when the first black family moves into a white neighborhood in 1959, and, 50 years later, when residents want to protect the distinct African American culture of their district from becoming the new hip place for wealthy young whites to live. The theatre played a pivotal role in the development of The Columnist when Auburn received the Ingram New Works Fellowship, agreeing to grant it the rights for the regional theatre premiere. “I fell in love with The Columnist immediately,” says producing artistic director René Copeland. “David has such a way with dialogue— exceptional wit and insights into human nature. It was such an honor and a treat to watch the process, what he learned from our actors, the rewrites up to the last minute before the public René Copeland reading.” Copeland treasured the script of Clybourne Park when playwright Bruce Norris’ agent first sent it to her, hoping to produce as soon as possible. Instead of pulling back when the play won the Pulitzer Prize, she pushed for the rights for a Nashville production, snagging it before it won the 2012 Tony Award for Best Play. Copeland says, “ Clybourne Park is one of the most unsettling and funny plays I have ever read or seen. I’ve never had a more electric experience seeing a play in New York. I was just riveted. The play is hilarious—a comedy with an edge that pushes the buttons and prods you to examine your own state of mind.”
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Nashville Ballet
The Sleeping Beauty October 19-21, 2012 TPAC’s Andrew Jackson Hall “It’s an exciting season with a lot of choices and a lot of stories,” says Artistic Director and Chief Executive Officer Paul Vasterling about Nashville Ballet’s upcoming productions. Everyone who knows him often hears Vasterling use the word “story” as he describes the work of his professional company. To him, above all, ballets tell stories, from world premieres with Latin American flair to world-famous classics like The Sleeping Beauty on stage this October. Creating the magic of the fairytale world with lavish costumes and scenic design inspired by the opulent 16th century court of Louis IV, the ballet tells the story of the beautiful, bewitched Princess Aurora, rescued from a 100-year sleep by a brave, handsome prince. Though often regarded as a love story, The Sleeping Beauty is also a struggle between two conflicting forces of good and evil, represented by the good fairy, Lilac, and the evil one, Carabosse. Vasterling’s storytelling is based on Petipa’s original choreography to the music of Tchaikovsky and will be performed by The Nashville Symphony. “The Sleeping Beauty is a large scale work— big and beautiful with a gigantic cast, including youth from our school and gorgeous music, and traditional choreography with a lot of pointe work,” Vasterling says. “It’s also a really wonderful fairy tale Paul Vasterling about the eternal search for love, with a happy ending when the Prince finds his true love Aurora, the sleeping beauty.” The ballet was first created in the early 1890s, when, Vasterling explains, “All of the aesthetics in that period had a tremendous influence on the art form—a strong emphasis on symmetry and beauty, with a lot of lace and pointe work, a time when that was fairly new. It’s the quintessential tutu ballet. Much of the ballet choreography in the 20th century after The Sleeping Beauty was inspired by this work.”
The Sleeping Beauty
Imaginative cities in history are marked by artistic creativity in art and music. Count Nashville among them.
Next Big Hits By Anne Brown
NASHVILLE IS KNOWN AS MUSIC CITY AND AS THE ATHENS OF the South. Increasingly, the visual arts scene is adding to the city’s list of enviable monikers, thanks to artists, organizations, institutions, studios, galleries and museums dotting the 5th Avenue North Arts District, SOBRO and various other artistic neighborhoods. The payoff? In the last 10 to 15 years, the increasing presence of visual art has made dramatic contributions to the public, institutional, and business life of the city, adding to Nashville as an exciting 21st-century destination. And the nation is taking note. The New York Times recently lauded the city’s
revitalization efforts, its culinary offerings and its national artistic influences. Other publications such as The Wall Street Journal, GQ, Forbes and American Way magazine have recently reported why Nashville is a hip place to live and work. The accolades are some 40 years in the making. In the 1970s and ’80s, the modern Nashville arts scene began with a series
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of independent initiatives in music and visual arts that collectively brought academic, civic, government and business institutions to consider the arts as legitimate enterprises. The Tennessee Performing Arts Center (TPAC), the Tennessee State Museum and the Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University brought new energy to the art scene. In the early 1980s, the Metro Nashville Arts Commission was established with the primary mission to make the arts a household word throughout the city. City leaders encouraged business and Metro to support public artistic initiatives such as the former Summer Lights Festival, presenting both performances and exhibitions, attracting more than 300,000 people each year for over 10 years. The Arts in the Airport program—one collecting Tennessee art, presenting exhibitions and offering music performances—was established in 1987 with the opening of the new Nashville International Airport. In the 1990s, the arts scene changed monumentally when a group of business leaders became interested in developing the visual arts to keep pace with music and performing arts. As a result, the Frist Center for the Visual Arts opened in 2001, bringing to the area worldclass exhibitions throughout the year, while also curating and exporting exhibitions to other major marketplaces. Simultaneously, the Schermerhorn Symphony Center and the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum moved into new buildings next door to each other and just blocks from the Frist Center and the Fifth Avenue North Arts District. Since 2000, a downtown Nashville initiative in the visual arts has been emerging. 5th Avenue of the Arts, established in the mid-1990s. In the last six years the project has grown exponentially as more than 15 galleries opened in the same downtown block. This group is a collaboration of city organizations including the mayor’s office, Nashville Downtown
Photos, top to bottom: Arts supporters in the 1980s gather in a show of support for the arts in Nashville. The Frist Center for the Visual Arts opened in 2001, itself a work of art with its Art Deco interior hall.
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Partnership, Nashville Convention and Visitors Bureau, the Metro Arts Commission and art galleries—led by The Arts Company, The Rymer Gallery, Tinney Contemporary and boutique galleries in the Arcade. This group is best known for hosting the First Saturday Art Crawl and the bimonthly Collectors Art Night series, attracting an average of 1,200-1,500 people monthly to view up to 20 new exhibitions. More ambitious plans include a revamped streetscape for this block, currently underway; completion is scheduled for late fall 2012. New sidewalks, lighting, special events and outdoor dining will welcome residents and visitors to a new area designed specifically for artistic and other small business enterprises. Celebrated, too, are the additional art crawls that have emerged in other area neighborhoods, including East Nashville, Hillsboro Village and in nearby Franklin, Tenn. In this same decade, the Nashville Film Festival grew in exposition and influence for independent film makers and audiences. Currently, the new Music City Center, scheduled to open May 2013, will be anchored by a public collection of artwork commissioned and selected to enhance this rising Nashville icon. Another related and stunning visual art development is the public art program managed by the Metro Arts Commission. They are commissioning a major public art sculpture to be positioned in the center of the new Music City Roundabout near the Music City Center. By whatever artful name it’s called—Nashville’s hits just keep on coming.
An artists rendering of 5th Avenue Arts District Streetscape (top) where construction is due to be complete before the end of 2012.
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One might say in our walk of faith, we’ve been down many paths. But few as exciting as the one we’re on now. With hard hats and rolled sleeves, we’re building a university that will serve students in greater, more innovative ways than ever in our history. Two new health science buildings providing state-of-the-art facilities for nursing and pharmacy.
In just the past 24 months— 16 new graduate programs, with more to come, that meet the demands of today’s workforce in fields such as information technology and biomolecular science. And almost 60 new faculty members to help us keep our stride. Watch us as we hammer out our future and take some exciting steps forward.
To us, this is a stepping stone.
www.lipscomb.edu
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by Phyllis Stark
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NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
What’s behind the charitable work of Nashville’s music community, including Martina McBride, Dierks Bentley and Thompson Square? Nashville Arts & Entertainment takes a look.
N
ashville’s music stars have long DJ Anderson , worldwide for a Franklin residentbeen since 2003, finished her firstambassadors novel, Mercy of the Fallen, shortly after moving to the Nashville area. This intimate portrait of a this city’s rich musical culture. modern woman, torn the life shethe has chosen and the roadmany not Butbetween beyond music, taken, will strike a chord with readers in their fifties as in their twenties. recording artists are shining a positive Mercy is available in paperback on Amazon.com to Barnes lightof the onFallen Music City in another way.andThey’re and Noble online members. There is also a downloadable version available. deeply involved in charity work, using their Visit www.authordjanderson.com for more information.
fame as a platform to raise awareness— as well as millions of dollars—for worthy Lori Ward is the vice president of communications and community causes, not just locally but nationally and relations at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center, celebrating its 33rd abroad. season in Nashville. Her 14 years here have been the highlight of her career Many artists, but particularly Nashville’s in public relations and communications for nonprofit arts and education country and Christian music stars, hold a organizations. deeply-felt belief that because they have been given an opportunity to have a career Ashlan Bonnell they love, it’s their responsibility—perhaps Born and raised in Nashville, Ashlan Bonnell is a sports and entertainment even writer their give back, and freelance and obligation—to recent college graduate of Lipscomb University. She they do so professional generously. majored in English writing and minored in journalism and new media, focusing onbeen sports writing, whileblessed holding internships WSMV-TV, “We’ve very to atbe able Titans Radio and the Nashville not writing cheering on to live the kind Predators. of lifeWhen that we ordo, and
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do what we love to do,” says Keifer Thompson of the hot country duo Thompson Square, which works with the charity ChildFund International. “I think if God blesses you in a way where you can do what you want to do for a living, and you have the opportunity to reach the masses and change as many people’s lives as you can, that’s our responsibility as public figures to do that. If you don’t get involved with something, you definitely are not doing yourself justice or the world any justice. It’s not just about singing country songs, it’s about making a difference.” Singer and Outdoor Channel TV star Craig Morgan agrees. “We are blessed, and the blessings we get THOMPSON SQUARE are because of those people in and CHILDFUND INTERNATIONAL around our communities,” he says. “If it weren’t for the fans out there, we wouldn’t have a gig, none of us. So I think it’s important that we give back to those fans in any way that we can.” “I think if you can help you should help,” adds Darius Rucker, country singer and front man for Hootie & the Blowfish. He works on behalf of numerous charities, including St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Special Olympics, NASCAR’s Victory Junction Camp and an impressively long list of others. Country star Dierks Bentley calls it simply “the right thing to do.” “I think of every town I’ve ever been through, and the tickets and the
DIERKS BENTLY MILES & MUSIC FOR KIDS
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NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
T-shirts and CDs we’ve sold, and how much those folks have given to me personally,” Bentley says of his fans. “It just seems like a natural evolution when you make it and you have this success. It’s cool to find some way to give back to the folks that made it all possible. “Nashville’s been my home for 19 years and it’s been really good to me,”
CARRIE UNDERWOOD
Bentley adds. “It’s great to give something back to it.” Martina McBride says it’s an individual choice for recording artists to involve themselves in charity work or not. “I’m not going to sit here and say people have to do that,” says the country star and longtime Nashville resident, but “it’s important for me. We just have such a platform where we can speak about things and people listen. I was raised in a really small town, with a really strong sense of community, so it’s just a natural thing for me to to be able to raise awareness for organizations and people that don’t have that platform to speak for themselves.” McBride has worked with numerous charities including Childhelp, YWCA of Middle Tennessee, National Network to End Domestic Violence, and a website about teen dating abuse and awareness called LoveIsRepect.org. Her oldest daughter, teenager Delaney, is following in her mother’s charitable footsteps, establishing a Love Is Respect club in her high school. After releasing a single last year that dealt with breast cancer, McBride traveled cross-country on a train, making stops along the way on behalf of General Mills’ Pink Together campaign and the Susan G. Komen for the Cure breast cancer charity.
Good Neighbors FOR THE NONPROFITS THAT BENEFIT FROM THEIR LARGESSE, Nashville’s celebrities can be valuable allies, as well as ambassadors. Nobody knows this better than Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Director Kyle Young, whose institution has benefited from the ongoing support of its board chairman, country artist Vince Gill; an annual We’re All for the Hall fundraising concert organized by singer Keith Urban; and the recent $4 million gift from Taylor Swift, which will fund a new education center at the museum bearing the singer’s name. “We’re fortunate that we’re living in a town full of generous artists,”Young says. “We have developed some great relationships with artists since we opened our doors [downtown] 10 years ago.” Young was particularly blown away by Swift’s donation, which will be used for a 7,500-square-foot education center, encompassing parts of two floors, when the museum completes its planned expansion in 2014. “This is a generous 22-year-old, and for her to believe in us, and to make such a significant commitment, is meaningful, obviously,” he says of Swift. “It also really speaks to her involvement in her [adopted] hometown. She clearly cares about what happens in this city… [And] certainly having an artist of her age and stature stepping up helps reinforce the point that we’re relevant and dynamic,” he says of the museum. Urban’s annual We’re All for the Hall concert at Bridgestone Arena has also been important to the museum, raising roughly $2 million in four years to support ongoing operations. Young calls those funds “a game changer for us.” And Young gives special credit to Gill, who has been the most vocal artist working to get his fellow stars to support the museum. “He’s the guy who was really out delivering that message for us because he cares so deeply about what we’re doing, and about the music and the history of the music,” Young says. Beyond the Hall of Fame, Gill is widely acclaimed for his support of dozens of charities, and his willingness to step in and help nonprofits whenever he’s asked. Here’s what a handful of other artists with Nashville ties are doing to help out various charities. • Jason Aldean is such a big supporter of the breast cancer charity Susan G. Komen
for the Cure that his website includes a button where fans can click to directly make a donation to the organization. Aldean has raised nearly $300,000 for the charity to date, according to the Komen website, mostly from an annual fundraising concert he organizes. Aldean lost a close friend to breast cancer in 2004. • Pop singer and “Duets” star Kelly Clarkson is one of the few artists whose website features an entire page devoted to the charities she supports. Those charities include the March of Dimes, where she serves as Team Youth Celebrity Ambassador and works to raise funds for the group’s March for Babies campaign to prevent premature births. Also benefiting from Clarkson’s involvement are the charities Houses of Hope, which builds homes in Southern Africa, plus Save The Children and Live Earth. • Animal lover Miranda Lambert started the charity MuttNation Foundation, which raises money to support animal shelters. Its other missions include encouraging responsible pet adoption, rehabilitating sick or unsocialized animals, funding spay/neuter programs, helping reduce
euthanasia of healthy animals and training shelter dogs for therapy programs that include assistance for wounded military personnel and dogs-in-prisons programs. • Like Lambert, Carrie Underwood started her own charity, the C.A.T.S. Foundation, in 2009. It benefits animal, town and school needs in her hometown of Checotah, Okla. Last December, she dispersed $350,000 of the charity’s funds to four schools in Checotah, which used the money to buy computer labs, playground equipment, and physical fitness equipment, as well as new band uniforms, furniture and instruments for their music programs, among other items. • The Zac Brown Band has been raising money for years for Camp Southern Ground, where the campers will be a mix of mainstream children and those with developmental disorders. The camp will provide special services for the latter. Located in Fayetteville, Ga., the camp is under construction, with plans to open in 2014. Frontman Brown calls the camp “part of my life’s work.” —P.S.
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Great Expectations Nashville’s stars are well aware that their fame, and that national platform they’ve been given, can be hugely beneficial for the charities they choose to devote their time to. When Thompson Square shot a three-minute video about ChildFund International, they played it every night before their opening slot on Lady Antebellum’s “Own the Night” tour, where they had an audience of more than 10,000 fans each evening. Representatives of the charity were on site in a booth at each concert, and fans that visited the booth and signed up to sponsor a child received an autographed copy of Thompson Square’s selftitled debut album. Since they began working with the charity in January, says Thompson, the band has helped provide nearly 800 children sponsorships. “That’s why we got involved, to be able to spread the message in front of that many people every night,” says Thompson, who cites staggering statistics about how many children die from malnutrition every year. “We’re raising awareness and, hopefully, saving some kids’ lives,” he says. “We’re very proud to be a part of it.” Thompson and his wife/bandmate, Shawna, sponsor a girl in Indonesia named Lady; Keifer says Lady’s family gets by on an income of just $400 a year. Craig Morgan is also glad for the opportunity to shine a spotlight on some worthy causes.
“We’re given a great opportunity as entertainers to be in front of a lot of people, so it’s important that we do the right thing,” he says. “When we’re in front of those people, if we have the opportunity to bring awareness to an organization that’s doing good things, we should do that. We are blessed to be able to do what we do, so we should share those blessings every chance we get.” Morgan’s own foundation is raising money to build a temporary home for displaced children awaiting permanent foster care in the Nashville suburb of Dickson, Tenn., where Morgan and his family reside. They also care for foster children in their home. In 2011, his two-day annual charity event, which includes a dirt bike ride, clay shoot and concert, raised more than $95,000 for the facility, to be called Billy’s Place, which he hopes to begin building next year. The trail ride alone attracted more than 400 bikers last year. Beyond the tangible rewards on behalf of their charities, artists say they reap personal rewards from their nonprofit work as well, although that’s a happy byproduct and not their goal. Singer Darryl Worley has hosted his three-day Tennessee River Run festival every year since 2001 to raise money for his foundation, and it draws more than 10,000 people annually. The money was used to build the Darryl Worley Cancer Treatment Center in 2010 on the campus of the Hardin Medical Center in his hometown of Savannah, Tenn. The Darryl Worley Foundation also supports St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Ayers Children’s Medical Center, Le Bonheur Children’s Medical Center in Memphis and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
DARRYL WORLEY DARRYL WORLEY CANCER TREATMENT CENTER
CRAIG MORGAN BILLY’S PLACE
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DARRYL WORLEY IN AFGHANISTAN
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“For us to be able to pull this off is huge,” Worley says of funding the treatment center. “It’s such a huge feeling of accomplishment.” But he chokes up when he explains the real rewards he derives from it. “The part that really touches you deep in your soul is when you have a family chase you down in the parking lot at Walmart, and everybody in the family has tears in their eyes as they go on and on about how [the facility] has blessed their family in some way,” he says. Rucker has also enjoyed the intangible rewards of his work. Last year, he wrote a song with developmentally disabled campers at the Lifting Lives Camp, sponsored by the Academy of Country Music (ACM) and Vanderbilt’s Kennedy Center. A few months later, he performed the song on the nationally televised ACM Awards, where he was joined by the campers for the performance in Las Vegas. Rucker says he never got the opportunity to see a playback of the performance until he was later asked to speak at Vanderbilt, and it was shown just before he took the stage. He found himself in tears after watching it. Seeing it play back, he realized that performing with the campers was “one of the greatest things I’ve ever done as a musician… That was a great moment,” he says of the rewarding feeling it gave him. “That was God putting me in the right place at the right time.”
DIERKS BENTLY MILES & MUSIC FOR KIDS
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“Everybody wants to do something that makes a difference,” says McBride. “I have my music and have been able to touch people with that, but there’s something to being able to speak out about domestic violence for a shelter,” or speak on behalf of another or the many charities she works with. “For me to be able to do that … I’m really blessed,” she adds. Bentley feels the same way about his annual Miles & Music for Kids fundraising motorcycle ride and benefit concert, which has raised more than $2 million since 2006 for Children’s Miracle Network-affiliated hospitals, including the Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt in Nashville. The event, which began locally, has since spread to six other cities, with proceeds benefiting a CMN hospital in each area. “It’s a win-win for everybody, and it feels so good to be up there at the end of the night,” he says of the event. “I get to go up there and hold that check and say, ‘This is what you guys have done. Look at this check for a quarter of a million dollars. This is going to go right back into the community to benefit families.’ It feels pretty good.” “It’s something I look forward to every year and I’m really proud to be identified with,” adds Bentley. “I’m the host, but the fans make it possible. They’re the ones that pay the money to take the ride and come to the show.” Bentley recruits lots of fellow musicians to participate, but says that’s the easy part. “Ninety-nine percent of artists that I know are great people and
Still, he adds, “It’s a sweet and precious gesture on their part to have my name across that building, and it is a wonderful feeling. It’s very surreal to know that we have accomplished [building] this out of such a tiny, rural area … It’s doing a lot of good, and that’s what it was all about On Point Morgan, a 10-year Army veteran, has performed for U.S. troops to start with.” Like Morgan and Bentley, Worley is also a strong supporter of the overseas nine times with the USO, and works extensively with military military, and recently returned from his eleventh trip to Afghanistan with charities, including serving as spokesperson for Folds of Honor, which the organization Stars For Stripes. On those trips, he prefers to play for provides scholarships for dependents of service members who have died in the line of duty. He’s even written and recorded a song for the troops in more remote bases, which don’t often get entertainers. Worley, Morgan, Bentley and Rucker’s Hootie & the Blowfish have each organization, “What Matters Most,” with download proceeds going established their own charitable foundations, and utilize boards of directors directly to the charity. and other volunteers to help them decide how best to apportion the money He calls the USO “an organization that I will participate in and be a part of as long as they will have me,” but Morgan says his work on behalf of all they raise. But artists say one of the hardest parts of their job is the fact that they simply don’t have time to participate in all of the charity requests that military nonprofits is tremendously rewarding for him personally. “It doesn’t matter what you do in life, anytime you do something for someone are asked of them. Says Rucker, “I could really do a charity tour from July to November of else, it gives you a good feeling, a sense of accomplishment,” he says. “It’s a wonderful experience to be at a show and have a soldier come up to you and say, just the requests I get.” He calls having to say no to some of them “awful” ‘You won’t remember this, but when you were in Afghanistan, you did a show and “one of the things I really despise about my job. I guess that’s why I and sang this particular song. [It had been] one of the worst days of my life, and have people who work with me [fielding the requests], because I wouldn’t say no. But I can’t do everything. People get I went to that show that night, and when you sang mad at me, and it hurts, but I can’t do all of that song, it really lifted my spirits and made me feel them.” like I could get through this particular situation.’ Bentley, who also proudly works with the “I’ve heard hundreds of those stories, if not veteran’ s charity Wounded Warrior Project in thousands,” says Morgan. “That’s a very rewarding addition to his own charity, agrees. “I want and humbling feeling to know that you can have to do them all,” he says of the fundraising that kind of an impact on someone’s life. requests he gets. “That’s why I have people “To me, it’s important to give to those fans that help me coordinate what we can and can’t that are serving,” he adds. “Not a lot of people do. They know I lean on the side of doing as know that only one percent of the people of this much as we can. It’s tough, because there’s a lot nation serve in its military, so that’s a very special of them, but it’s a good place to be. It’s nice to group of people. I just feel that it’s very important be asked, and for folks to think that your name that we support them any way we can.” might be able to help them raise money for their While Worley is proud of the cancer MARTINA MCBRIDE cause. treatment center in his hometown, and “[But] you’re going to lose some of your draw particularly the fact that no patient is if you do it all the time,” Bentley continues. ever turned away for a lack of insurance “You’ve got to pick the right ones where you or finances, he does admit to being can really make a difference, really keep it uncomfortable with it bearing his name. official so you’re not always out there and “I begged them not to plaster my name people get confused with that you’re doing.” all over that thing,” he says. “I had just lost a For McBride and other artists, it helps to friend—that was in his late 30s—to cancer. choose a few charities to focus on rather than We grew up together playing music, and I said, trying to do everything. ‘Name it after him.’ They had to explain to me “It’s always hard to say no to a charity,” how they were using my name, the celebrity, to she says. “BUT I FIND THAT IF YOU’RE get money and other things that go along with all FOCUSED ON A COUPLE OF THINGS, IT’S that. So I finally said [‘OK’]. But looking at that better than being too scattered and trying to building, that lettering is just vulgar. It’s so big,” do too many things. But I do whatever I can. VINCE GILL he says with a laugh. “I go by there and look the WE’RE ALL FOR THE HALL ‘There’s no such thing as a bad charity,’ Vince other way. It’s almost embarrassing.” Gill always said, and I agree.” feel blessed to have that opportunity to do what they do for a living, and they’re all about giving back,” Bentley says. “It’s a pretty cool thing.”
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Phil Vassar LISTENING TO PHIL VASSAR, IT’S OBVIOUS HE’S A GIFTED SINGER, compelling songwriter and amazing entertainer, but spend a little more time around the Virginia native and it’s readily apparent that one of his most endearing qualities is his infectious optimism. “I’ve learned a lot of lessons,” Vassar says. “I’ve learned that when you think you can’t go do any more, you can, and when you’ve had every door shut in your face, something is going to happen, something positive.” Vassar’s upbeat attitude has infused his songwriting. Since moving to Nashville from Lynchburg, Va., he found success penning tunes for other artists, including Tim McGraw’s “For a Little While” and “My Next Thirty Years,” Jo Dee Messina’s “I’m Alright” and Alan Jackson’s “Right On the Money.” The piano-pounding entertainer has also achieved success as an artist recording his own tunes, scoring such hits as “Just Another Day in Paradise,” “In a Real Love” and “Six-Pack Summer.” Last year Vassar embarked on a new adventure with the launch of Rodeowave Entertainment, a full-service record label, promotion team and artist management company. “For me, it was just time,” Vassar says of his decision to start his own company. “I wasn’t going to have somebody tell me when I could put my records out, when I can create. It just doesn’t make any sense, so it was time for me to do this. I want to work with real artists. I want to share what I’ve learned over the years.” Vassar put together an impressive promotion team headed by Teddi Bonadies, who worked with him during his days recording for both Arista Nashville Records and Universal Records South. He’s looking forward to signing other artists and giving them a shot. “It’s a good time to be a label guy because there’s a lot of great artists,” he says. “A lot of times now if you
sign with a major label, you are three years away from getting your record out. I think that we can help with that right now. That’s the cool thing.” Even in his new role as record executive/entrepreneur, Vassar isn’t letting business responsibilities dim his creative output. Prior to launching Rodeowave, he had six full-length albums to his credit, and since starting his new venture, he’s already released two albums and is working on another. Last year he delivered The Hits Live on Broadway, a 12-song collection that was recorded live on Nashville’s famed Lower Broad. Vassar also released “Noel,” a 10-track Christmas collection featuring five new songs and five standards. He’s currently working on a new album that will include the poignant single, “Don’t Miss Your Life,” a song inspired by a conversation on an airplane. “I was talking to a guy across the aisle who said, ‘I’m going to see my grandkids. I never saw my kids. I didn’t even see them grow up. I wasn’t at graduation. I missed all that. Don’t you miss that stuff.’ He said, ‘I regret it more than anything and I’ll never be able to get it back,’” Vassar says recalling the conversation. “I was looking at my cell phone, at my pictures of my daughters, and I’m not in any of these pictures. I just said, ‘Wow man! He’s right.’ Then I just started ‘Don’t Miss Your Life’ right there on the plane.” These days he’s balancing career and time with his two daughters and is grateful for all his blessings. “The music business has changed my life,” he says. “I came to town dead broke in a Ford Pinto with no floor board, and it changed my life. I worked really hard and I tell my kids all the time: Work hard, that’s what it’s all about. Nobody can take that away from you.”
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Randy Goodman Randy Goodman is one of the lucky individuals who has been blessed to live out his dream. “I’m one of those few people that my avocation became my vocation,” says Goodman, a Nashville native who began playing in his first band at age 12. “I got just really lucky. This is always what I wanted to do and I got to do it. Some kids grow up and it’s all about sports, but for me it was always about music.” Goodman parlayed that youthful enthusiasm into an enviable career. A Lipscomb University graduate, who also spent a year in Belmont University’s music business program, Goodman began his career in 1980 as a publicist at Top Billing Inc. A year later he joined RCA Records as a publicist and spent 16 years with the label, including a tenure in New York City as senior vice president in marketing for RCA Records globally. After returning to Nashville, Goodman became executive vice president and general manager of the RCA Label Group in Nashville. Goodman has worked with such artists as Waylon Jennings, Keith Whitley, Alabama, Dolly Parton, Wu-Tang Clan and Dave Matthews Band. “I left RCA in March of 1997 and then went on the Disney payroll in June of 1997,” Goodman says of opening Disney’s Lyric Street label, which launched the careers of Rascal Flatts, SHeDAISY and Bucky Covington, among others. He served as Lyric Street president until the label closed in April 2010. Since then he’s been anything but idle. Earlier this year, Goodman was appointed executive-in-residence at Lipscomb University’s College of Business. Further, he is also a member of the Country Music Association board of directors and a trustee for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Last year, the veteran executive was tapped by Mayor Karl Dean to serve as co-chairman of the Music City Music Council (formerly the Nashville Music Council). “Randy is the right person to promote our Music City brand and to help Nashville continue to attract and retain musicians and other creative people,” says Dean, who serves as co-chairman of the council. Among the items on the agenda is bringing the Grammy Awards to Music City. “We’re having really good discussions with them,” he says. “We brought in people during the CMA Music Festival so they could actually see Nashville hosting 35,000 to 40,000 people and doing all these different events. Part of
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it is making people aware of what Nashville can do. Nashville is one of the three major music centers. If it was going to go somewhere else, it would only make sense that it would be here, particularly because of the growing base of multi-genre artists who live here now.” In addition to his work with the Music City Music Council and Lipscomb University, Goodman also works as a consultant and is enjoying this new chapter of his career, which he describes his “free form jazz life.” It affords him the opportunity to engage in new opportunities like the council. “It’s a way for me to give back to Nashville and give back to the music industry,” he says of the volunteer position. “As has been true with everything I’ve done in my career, it really boils down to people that I work with. When I was at RCA, even more so than the artists, it was about the people that I was in the trenches with, the people who were mentoring me or the people that I was mentoring. [It was] the same thing with Lyric Street and is so similarly with the mayor’s office. Just the opportunity to get to hang with the mayor, work with him and be involved with him in these things—I don’t want to sound corny, but it’s been a joy.”
Scott Hamilton
There are certain athletes whose names become synonymous with their sport. When it comes to figure skating, Scott Hamilton is that man. During his career on the ice, the Ohio native won 70 titles, awards and accolades, including the Olympic gold medal in Sarajevo in 1984. A member of both the United States Olympic Hall of Fame and the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame, Hamilton’s prowess on the ice not only won him numerous honors, but also the enduring affection of skating fans worldwide. Sitting in a Franklin, Tenn., coffee shop after dropping off his children at school, the iconic athlete admits he’s enjoying life at a slower pace these days. “For 20 years of my life, I was on the road 10 months a year. That’s all I did,” says Hamilton, who, after turning professional, toured with Ice
Capades for two years before he created Stars on Ice. He co-produced and starred in Stars on Ice for 15 years. “I worked really hard for a long time and I didn’t really do anything for me. I just saved and invested and now I feel like I’ve earned the time to be with my family,” says Hamilton, who has two sons—Aidan, 9, and Maxx, 4. “I just really want to be there for my kids. I love being there in the morning to make them breakfast and drive them to school, and I like being involved in all their sports.” In 2005, Scott and his wife, Tracie, moved from Southern California to Nashville. “It’s so beautiful here,” says Hamilton, who still travels as a corporate speaker and TV skating commentator. “My old manager would say, ‘What’s
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the biggest difference?’ and I’d say, “the biggest difference is I like getting in my car.’ I’ll go out and get lost on purpose because it’s so beautiful to drive around the countryside. You can take a full breath and just sigh instead of hold your breath and drive around with white knuckles. We have traffic here. Every city has traffic, but it’s relatively benign.” These days when he takes to the ice, it’s generally skating at A-Game Sportsplex in Franklin where he likes to spend time with his children. Still passionate about the sport, Hamilton is also working on a new venture to promote skating. “I’m trying to build a small company here that will promote more of a professional style of skating competitions,” the 54-year-old says. “Hopefully we’ll launch in 2013, but we’ve been slowly building that company to try to give skating another boost in popularity.” Hamilton is also well known for his philanthropy. He’s a huge supporter of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis and joined his pal, country music star Brad Paisley to decorate for the kids during Christmas last year. He also lends his support to the Make-AWish Foundation, Special Olympics, Athletes Against Drugs, Target House and the Pediatric Aids Foundation. However, the organization closest to his heart is the Scott Hamilton CARES Initiative. A cancer survivor, Hamilton founded CARES in 1999 as a partnership with the Cleveland Clinic Taussig Cancer Institute in Ohio where he was treated for testicular cancer. “I noticed some things when I went through my cancer that are missing, gaps that really need to be filled and a part of that is support for the patient and a part of that is information for the patient,” says Hamilton, who laughs and says he’s had a “unique hobby of collecting life-threatening illnesses.” He’s suffered a brain aneurysm and has twice been treated for benign brain tumors. In addition to raising funds for cancer research, CARES also launched the 4th Angel Mentoring Program, which matches newly diagnosed patients with trained volunteers who are also cancer survivors. Further, it developed chemocare.com. “It’s a really impressive website because it goes through every aspect of the chemotherapy experience,” he says. “It describes in detail how each drug works, how chemotherapy is administered, how to manage the side effects, and all of that written in eighth-grade English and Spanish, so it’s user-friendly information that exists 24/7.” Just as he was driven on the ice to win the gold, these days Hamilton is even more driven to make a difference in the lives of those suffering from cancer. “I lost my mom when I was very young. She lost her battle at 49,” says Hamilton. “When I turned 50 I realized that I have an opportunity to do something that she didn’t and I’d better get on my horse and get it done. So I’ve been working every year to bring more people in and kind of grow the organization slow and true and strong so that we can make a difference in the cancer community. The end game for all of us is a cure or to better understand the conditions of the disease in order to make it a chronic illness instead of a life-threatening illness. We’re working on it, and I’m really proud of how far we’ve come.”
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Keni Thomas It’s a long way from the streets of Mogadishu to a recording studio in Nashville, but Keni Thomas is thankful to have made the journey. A singer, songwriter, author, speaker and former Army Ranger, Thomas survived the bloody 1993 battle in Mogadishu, Somalia, that inspired the film Black Hawk Down. “It’s odd that one day could have such a indelible mark on your life,” says Thomas, who chronicled his experiences in his 2011 book Get It On! What it Means to Lead the Way. “It defines me because I understand what it means to be counted on. Leadership is about the example that you set, and the most surprising leadership comes from people without rank. It’s not about tenure or rank or the badge that you wear. It’s about the example you set.” The lessons Thomas learned that day about accountability, camaraderie and leadership provide the foundation of the message he shares as a much-sought-after motivational speaker and have colored his music on 2005’s Flags of Our Fathers: A Soldier’s Story and 2007’s Gunslinger.
A Florida native, Thomas enlisted in the Army after his college graduation. He completed Airborne School and was assigned to B Company 3rd Ranger Battalion of the 75th Ranger Regiment. In the summer of 1993, Sgt. Thomas and his company were deployed to Somalia as part of Operation Restore Hope. On Oct. 3, Thomas and his fellow Rangers entered Mogadishu on a mission and became involved in a bloody firefight with Somalis that lasted 18 hours, leaving 19 American soldiers dead and 78 wounded. “At some point in a battle, you come to peace with the fact that if I die, I die. I really did,” he shares. “There isn’t a day that goes by [when] I don’t think about that battle. I really do understand that the only reason I made it out of there is by the grace of God and the people He put on my left and right that day. I understand the value in that and what it’s done for me.” Next year marks the 20th anniversary of the Battle of Mogadishu and Thomas has commissioned noted military artist James Dietz to create a painting commemorating the battle. “I’m so excited,” Thomas says. “Everybody knows who this guy is and he’s going to do a painting of the battle. I’m going to have it ready by the anniversary next year and then we’ll sell the prints and auction off the original painting [to benefit] Warrior Foundation.” Thomas is a spokesperson for the Special Operations Warrior Foundation, which provides scholarships to children of special operations personnel who die in training or on missions. It also provides financial assistance to severely wounded special operations personnel and their families. “There’s a little over 900 in the pipeline right now,” Thomas says of students who have received full scholarships. “I sang the national anthem at the Yankees game and I got to meet a couple more of the kids who just graduated college. One of them—I knew their dad. It’s a pretty neat thing and it’s an amazing community of people.” When not working on behalf of the Warrior Foundation or on the road with his speaking engagements, Thomas has been working on a new album. “We wanted to keep it as sort of a companion piece to the book which is positivity and motivation, so there’s no heartache, no break up, no drinking songs. These are all happier and uplifting. You should feel good when you finish the record, and the album is going to be called Give It Away, which is pretty much what I do with my music anyway,” he says with a laugh. “ Give It Away is a song about learning the hard way that you only get what you give. I’ve learned that. The more you give, the more it comes back at you. That’s the theme to set the tone of the album.” After nearly two decades spent trying to reconcile his experiences in Mogadishu with his aspirations as a
recording artist, his life on the speakers’ circuit and his work for the Warrior Foundation, Thomas says he sees all the pieces of his life falling in place and complimenting each other for a greater purpose. “The guy who is going to be the best man in my wedding just called me up last night and he was trying to be really calm as he told me his son had gotten wounded,” Thomas says. “Dylan was in a vehicle and got hit with an IED [improvised explosive device]. The guy next to him was killed and Dylan has shrapnel in his back. He’ll be ok, but he’s going to come home and deal with that for the rest of his life. In a blink of an eye, his vehicle gets hit and the guy next to him, a friend of his, dies. He’s going to somehow manufacture some sort of blame [thinking], ‘Gosh if he hadn’t been there that would have killed me.’ It’s going to be hard.” Thomas wants to spend his future helping soldiers like Dylan. “I feel like right now that’s what my mission is going to be, to raise up these folks who are coming home,” he says. “How do you take what you’ve seen and done and all that’s going to come with it and turn it into a positive driving force in your life like what people around me helped me do? How do you do that? That’s my mission. I know where I’m supposed to be and that is to help folks make that transition home.”
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Michael W. Smith Nashville Arts & Entertainment: As you approach 30 years as a recording artist how do you explain your longevity especially in the changing nature of the music business and the current prevalence of one hit wonders?
Without a doubt—my parents. I am the product of loving, praying parents. My mom and dad prayed for me and believed in me at a time I
I’d first say that I am grateful for such a long and incredible career. I think
didn’t believe in myself. They stood in the gap for me during some dark
part of the longevity is that I never really pursued any of this as a career! I set
times. And my pastor—Don Finto—has walked with me for over 30 years.
out to write songs and make records. If it had ended after the first record—
Don was the one there during the No.1 singles and the gold and platinum
I would have considered it a success. I guess I’ve never really made decisions
sales gently (and sometimes not so gently) reminding me what really matters
based on what I thought would benefit my career. I’ve never really sat down
—what’s really important in life and keeping it all in perspective.
and mapped out a “long term strategy.” I’m sure the people around me think
NAE: You seem to have your priorities straight . . . faith, family and then
a bit more strategically than I do—but they free me up to just make the
business. What do you attribute to this unique balance in life?
music that I’m led to make. NAE: Who has influenced you the most musically?
I mentioned Don Finto earlier and he’s certainly an important part of that. But the one that ultimately adds balance to my life is Debbie. We recently celebrated
I have a lot of musical heroes and they cover a big spectrum of music.
our 30th wedding anniversary and she is absolutely the love of my life. It’s not
I listen to everything from classical to pop to soundtracks. I’m a big fan
hard to keep perspective and balance when after picking up an award your wife
of John Williams. A lot of people remember great movies—I remember
reminds you that you’re driving carpool in the morning! I know I would never
their soundtracks! “Indiana Jones,” “Jurassic Park,” “ET,” “Star Wars”—
have made it without her love and support. She is simply amazing!
all amazing pieces of music. Ennio Morricine’s soundtrack to “The
NAE: Creatively what is next? Do you have a passion in music yet to be
Mission” is stunning. And like any guy my age—I grew up listening to
explored?
the Beatles, Elton John, Kansas and Billy Joel. These artists wrote music that shaped a generation.
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NAE: Who has influenced you the most spiritually?
NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
What’s next is a hard question to answer. Because on any given day, I might write a pop song or a worship song or another instrumental piece.
I never really know what’s going to happen when I lay my fingers on the piano. You always hope you land on something that is fresh, has a big hook and very different than anything you have ever heard. Writing a hit song is not easy. Regarding next album, when I get deep into the writing process, it becomes very apparent the style of record that is formulating. I am also cowriting with some very good songwriters whom I have never worked with before on the next record, which I am very thrilled about. NAE: In keeping with the theme of this edition of Nashville Arts & Entertainment . . . you are known to have one of the biggest hearts in town. Giving back seems to be a part of your DNA. Tell us about your vision for Rocketown and the impact Rocketown is having on inner city kids. I’ve learned over the years that I’m the happiest and most satisfied when I’m giving my life away. When I’m giving to or investing in others. My favorite Martin Luther King, Jr. quote is: “Life’s most urgent question is: what are you doing for others?” I believe ROCKETOWN is making a difference in our community. The kids that visit Rocketown may come from the projects or from Brentwood—but their needs are the same. They are looking to be loved, to be valued, to be respected. And, that’s what we do at Rocketown. I am extremely grateful for the redemption stories I hear on a weekly basis, and grateful to our amazing staff and board of directors who love Rocketown as much as I do.
effective they are. Amazing to see the use of funds when they flow through an organization like SP compared to the wasted time and money through the hands of governments. The folks on the cruise responded to the need that was presented. I’m very proud that so much was raised for such a great organization. NAE: What are your plans for the rest of the year and into 2013? So far this year, the world tour has taken me to Brazil, Australia, two times to Europe and twice to Canada. Later this year I’m headed out on a USO tour to play for the troops, then to South Africa and Zimbabwe, a fall tour here in the US and a Christmas tour with a full symphony orchestra. And, I’m very excited to be playing three nights with the Nashville Symphony Orchestra in October. Nothing better than playing your very own hometown. Last but not least, my last of five children (Emily) gets married in September and grandchild number seven is on the way. Never a dull moment around the Smith house.
NAE: You recently returned from a week-long cruise from Montreal to Nova Scotia ending in Boston Mass. What is it like traveling with 1,300 of your biggest fans? That was actually our fourth “Friends Cruise.” I remember being very apprehensive about the first one! I got over that really fast. Spending a week vacationing with some of the finest people on earth is a privilege. Debbie and I take the kids, the grandkids and a bunch of other family and friends. It really is a great time. Seeing these people come together and form friendships has been one of the most satisfying things of my career. NAE: I understand that during the cruise you raised over $100,000 for the Samaritan’s Purse Charity. Tell us more about this Franklin Graham initiative. Debbie and I always wanted the cruises to have a charitable component so we invited some of the folks who work with Franklin Graham and Samaritan’s Purse to come along with us. I believe in the work of Samaritan’s Purse because I’ve seen it first-hand. I’ve been on the ground with SP just days after the earthquake in Haiti and after the tornados in Alabama and I’ve seen how
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Crazy Otto Music www.CrazyOtto.com ALL TOO OFTEN, WE SETTLE FOR WHAT’S HOT RIGHT NOW WHILE real brilliance languishes in the shadows. We go mining for arcade tokens when there’s a hundred dollar gold piece on the floor next to our shoe. That might explain why most of us have never heard of Johnny Maddox, aka “Crazy Otto,” purveyor of a world-class collection of early American music and one of the greatest ragtime pianists of all time—“the white boy with colored fingers,” as W.C. Handy put it. Born August 4, 1927, a sixth-generation son of Gallatin, Tenn., Johnny Maddox was schooled in ragtime by his Aunt Zula Cothon, a pianist who wowed audiences at the World’s Fair in 1946. He began his professional career at age 12, playing with a dance orchestra. An integral part of the ragtime revival of the 1950s, his first singles for Dot Records sold over 22,000 copies in five short weeks. Then he hit the big time with “The Crazy Otto Medley” in 1955, the first all-piano record to sell a million copies. Actually, make that two million. And the moniker, which (understandably) Maddox doesn’t really appreciate, stuck. After all, this ragtime and blues master—who graced stages with Milton Berle, Lawrence Welk, Patsy Cline, Eddy Howard, Eddie Arnold and all the leading ragtime greats of his day—is more than a great piano man. A noted musicologist, ragtime historian and preservationist, Maddox’s extensive collection of early American sheet music and music memorabilia is quite possibly one of the largest in the world, including 30,000 78 rpm records, Edison wax cylinders and piano rolls. A conservative estimate of his sheet music collection is 200,000 pieces, 3,000 of which he can play from memory. The 85-year-old Maddox rarely plays at home anymore. He did play last year at a small Gallatin church, packing out the pews with his young pianist friend Adam Swanson, who Maddox says, “can make a piano knit a pair of socks.” Not much demand, it seems, for an old ragtime piano man around here, he reckons. But for the past 16 years, at the Strayer Hotel in Durango, Colo., for the cocktail and dinner hours, you could find his brilliance at the keyboard. “I play from ‘can to can’t,’” Maddox says, doubtful he’ll continue next year “in the smallest room I’ve ever played. I’m working like a mule in front of a plow. . . But the people are wonderful here. People all over the U.S. plan their vacations around this.” “Showbiz as I knew it is gone,” says Maddox, who once played the Stork Club in New York City. “The supper clubs and orchestras and theaters and
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night clubs with live players... but back in the day, when I’d travel [from gig to gig], I’d always go to antique shops and pick up music. I didn’t buy it to sell it, but I’ve always been interested in the preservation aspect.” Among his rarest, he muses, is an 1899 first-edition printing of Scott Joplin’s “The Maple Leaf Rag” and “Maryland, My Maryland,” the first official state song of Maryland and a lot of confederate music of the Civil War, including “The Bonnie Blue Flag” from 1861. “Ragtime is extremely happy music, dance music. It’s the first truly American music.” But Maddox has no particular favorite among his vast collection. “I’m like Jesus,” he says, “I love ’em all.” He’s just hoping that his collection can remain in and find a place of value in Tennessee. “That’s my request anyway,” he says. “I know my music and I know what’s good. It’s all in really good condition because I don’t fool with tore up music.”
The Single Action Shooting Society www.SASSnet.com The first Saturday of each month, in the nearby town of Wartrace, Tenn., more than 125 cowboys and cowgirls gather for a shooting event. People like Cody Kid and Buxom Boo— known in their real lives as Ronald and Marty Ligon of Franklin,Tenn.— members of The Wartrace Regulators, are one of 10 Single Action Shooting Society clubs in the state. They dress in authentic, period-specific Western wear and compete with firearms of the Old West, including single action revolvers, lever-action rifles and old time shotguns. Staged in Old West scenarios called features, often based RONALD AND MARTY LIGON on famous incidents or scenes from Western movies, this friendly little competition is a sight to see. Actually, it was only “little” in the early 1980s when a group of older gents in California, longing to live out their passion for all things Gene Autry and Hopalong Cassidy, decided to dress up like cowboys and have a little shooting game. Local cowboy enthusiasts—it was, after all, the Reagan era—caught wind of the idea and formed their own groups, and the Single Action Shooting Society was born.
“When you join,” says Ronald Ligon, who signed up in 2000, “two things happen: You’re given a number for life, and two, you pick an alias. We never use our real names, just our cowboy names, because here we’re all the same... ditch diggers shooting next to millionaires. The camaraderie has a lot of appeal... our mutual love of Western history and shooting as a sport that makes it so rewarding.” And the Ligons are certainly not alone. Since 2000, membership all over the world has increased dramatically from just over 22,000 to 92,000. And, it’s not just older folks on the quick draw. The demographic is getting younger by the year, as new cowboys and cowgirls discover what has become the fastest-growing gun sport in the world. Don’t believe it? You should meet Evil Roy, the national SASS champ shooter in 2000 and let him introduce his 18-year-old granddaughter Randi Rogers (“Holy Terror”), the No. 1 women’s shooter today. The current national and world champion is 21-year-old Spencer Hoglund, better known as Lead Dispencer. Enthusiasts can shoot on any weekend in the U.S., competing locally, regionally and at the End of the Trail national shoot held on the SASS Founder’s Ranch in Albuquerque, N.M. Internationally, there are SASS events in Canada, Australia, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Lebanon, Sweden and South Africa. “When you’re talking about cowboys,” Ligon adds, “it’s not a long period in our history . . . 50 years at most, really more like 30 years. And yet, there has never been anything that has affected the whole world as much as our western history, which is one of the reasons it is known worldwide. William F. ‘Buffalo Bill’ Cody, a scout and a marksman of that era, exposed the cowboy culture to the world with his Wild West show. It was Disney World before there was Disney World. He took it to England then to Europe, and then came Western movies . . . and now it’s all over the world.”
Yazoo Brewing Company www.YazooBrew.com Whether there’s a tear in your beer or a beer in your hand, suds are to Music City what champagne is to midnight on New Year’s Eve. There can’t be a meal or a concert or marathon in this city without an ice-cold one at the beginning, middle and/or end. One can even drink a pint in the hallowed pews of the Mother Church, Ryman Auditorium. Which is part and parcel the reason why Yazoo Brewing Company has become the Nashville’s premiere local brewing favorite. Founded in 2003 by Mississippi native Linus Hall, having left his job as a tire engineer to get his M.B.A. at Vanderbilt in order to pursue his dream of beer crafting, Yazoo’s taproom is a beer lover’s Shangri-La.
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Lionel Richie’s Tuskegee
With eight unique brews all made from scratch by a grand total of seven brewers, local enthusiasm for Yazoo’s Southern charm continues to grow. Whether you prefer the smoky, sultry Sue (which recently starred in a commemorative birthday ice cream at Jeni’s Ice Cream in East Nashville), the Sly Rye Porter, the ever-mysterious Hop Project, the Hefeweizen or the revival of Gerst Beer—a liquid homage to the godfather of local brews and bars, The Gerst Haus—the folks at Yazoo Brew are bent on beer as a way of life. Every beer has a story, and every story deserves another beer. Dos Perros, Yazoo’s most popular blend, was recently highlighted as one of the 10 best Southern beers of the summer by Garden & Gun magazine. By now, Dos Perros die-hards know the story of how drunken dogs in Linus’ back yard inspired its creation. But that’s just one of many beer stories. Yazoo Brewing takes its community involvement almost as seriously as it takes its beer. Involved in a myriad of charitable events and especially associated with CASA (Court Appointed Child Advocates), Yazoo’s tightknit crew couldn’t be more in the thick of Nashville if they tried. Folks with the chutzpah to brave the triple-digit heat at this year’s Hot Chicken Festival likely imbibed in the hottest chicken and the hottest beer in town, courtesy head brew master Hall and company. And lest one think beer is the beverage of the sedentary, think again. Yazoo Brew has been organizing Barely a 4K Beer Runs across the South, bringing beer-loving runners together for treks through Fort Negley and Nashville City Cemetery. At the finish line? A cold Yazoo brew, of course. Just another way Yazoo Brewing has wormed its way into the hearts of locals. So, if you’ve not hit the Taproom at 901 Division Street or taken a brewery tour (Saturdays from 2:30-6:30pm, $7) as yet, go get your pint on.
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Lionel Richie staged a massive career comeback this year in the most unlikely of places—right here in Music City. But the Los Angeles-based star, whose successes have mainly come in the pop and R&B music fields, is a longtime fan of country music as well, dating back to his Alabama upbringing. That’s why he chose Nashville as the place to record Tuskegee, which is well on its way to being one of the year’s top-selling albums in any genre. The set—which features some of Richie’s best-loved hits repurposed as duets with major country stars—sold more than a million copies in just the first five weeks after its March release, and became Richie’s highestcharting album in 26 years. Such artists as Kenny Chesney, Rascal Flatts, Blake Shelton, Jason Aldean, Shania Twain, Willie Nelson and Tim McGraw eagerly participated in the project, which also spawned a spring CBS television special produced by the Academy of Country Music. The success of Tuskegee puts Richie in the same league as Ray Charles, the only other artist in history to score No. 1 albums on both the Billboard Country Albums and R&B/Hip-Hop Albums charts. The project also managed to give Nashville’s top stars some great exposure well outside the U.S. borders. It became a hit in Canada, the U.K., Denmark, Holland and Sweden. While the set marks the first time Richie has splashed both feet in Nashville’s musical waters, he’s dipped his toes there quite a few times in his career. In Richie’s hitmaking heyday—the 1980s—several of his songs were re-cut as country tunes. Kenny Rogers scored with “Lady” in 1980 (and reprises the track as a duet with Richie on Tuskegee). Conway Twitty cut “Three Times A Lady” in 1983, and the seminal country band Alabama had a top 10 duet with Richie on “Deep River Woman” in 1986. With the success of Tuskegee under his belt, expect Richie to become a regular presence on Music Row. Says the star, “I have loved my time in Nashville and can’t wait to spend more time there writing songs and collaborating in the studio. It inspires me creatively, and being there just makes my heart feel good.”
Opyland Hotel’s Relâche Spa & Salon It may come as a surprise to out-of-town guests, but Nashvillians love their spa dates. Manis, pedis, facials, massages—locals believe in the power of the pamper and few have reservations about putting cash where countenance is. Nashville makes it easy, nail salons tucked in every corner and full-service spas in every area of the city. But when it comes to the crème de la crème, it takes a world-class hotel to make a world-class spa possible. And class is the case at the Opryland Hotel. As part of the $270 million renovation after the flood of 2010, Relâche features over 27,000-square-feet of luxurious facilities for its guests, including 12 impressive treatment rooms, indoor and outdoor pools and a state-of-the-art fitness center, all just down the corridor from your hotel room. The not-so-well-kept secret is, you don’t have to be a guest of the hotel to indulge in Relâche. Nashville spa-lovers have been making the Briley Parkway trek and slipping into the Toast of the Town-pick since 2007. Why? Because Relâche covers and re-covers all the blissful bases. Just about every variety of massage is available here: hot stone, deep tissue, neuromuscular, shiatsu, Swedish, harmonic couples, mother-to-be and more. Up to nine different facials and skin renewal treatments, along with signature body treatments and wraps, nail care, make-up, waxing and fullservice hair salon services. Hotel guest or local girl, some things are simply worth the trip.
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Music City Center OUT WITH THE OLD, IN WITH THE NEW. Downtown Nashville is being transformed by the sophistication and elegance of the new convention venue, known as Music City Center. Butch Spyridon, president of the Nashville Convention and Visitors Bureau, believes Nashville will see extensive improvements. “If you look at the old center on Broadway and you think about everything it doesn’t do, this does it,” Spyridon says. “From looks to activation to usefulness, on every front, that building has nothing compared to this one—it does everything.” With construction well on its way to completion in the spring of 2013, Nashville is already feeling the impact of the new commodity and the addition of its neighboring buildings. “With the center, the Omni Nashville Hotel and the Country Music Hall of Fame, it’s a billion dollars in construction because of the hospitality industry [during] the worst recessionary period in the history of the country and certainly our generations,” Spyridon says. “That’s a pretty nice statement for Nashville and this industry.
We’ve led the opportunity for Nashville to have its own stimulus package, put people to work— temporary jobs and future permanent jobs. So, it’s another added value to the center.” Not only will the Music City Center generate visitor dollars, sales tax revenue and raise property values, but it will also help promote Mayor Karl Dean’s vision of Nashville as the greenest city in the South. The center will be Silver Level LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certified. Its green roof, solar panels, excellent recycling plans and a 360,000-gallon water tank, which recycles rainwater for non-drinking purposes, will help the center foster these green initiatives. The 1.2-million-square-foot center boasts supreme functionality with nearly 350,000square-feet of exhibit space, 90,000-square-feet of meeting space, the state’s largest ballroom at 57,000-square-feet and approximately 1,800 parking spaces. The Grand Ballroom, and its built-in stage, provides Nashville with a new venue for events of all kinds, including parties, banquets and concerts.
Yet, what the Music City Center hails in functionality, it truly exceeds in appearance. “This is not an ugly box,” Spyridon says. “It is stunning in its design and its unique features that represent Nashville.” Whether it is the undulating roof, reminiscent of Tennessee’s rolling hills, or the guitar-shaped Grand Ballroom marked by burled wood, the center exudes the essence of Nashville. Though the use of floor-to-ceiling windows, balconies and terraces add elegance to the architecture, the city skyline views they provide spotlight the entirety of downtown Nashville, not just the structure itself. It’s this sense of showcase, both for the center and the city, that makes the Music City Center such an interesting and incredible fixture in Nashville. “On every level, it is meeting and exceeding our expectations and our promises,” Spyridon says. “It’s crazy, good crazy. It’s all working. The brand, Nashville, has never been hotter … [The Music City Center] is going to be a game changer, and it’s going to outshine everyone’s expectations.”
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OMNI NASHVILLE HOTEL Thinking outside the “hotel box” The Omni Nashville Hotel is anything but cookie-cutter. Termed “urban elegance with a vintage touch” by designer Jim Looney, the Omni uniquely highlights Nashville with what Director of Sales and Marketing Tod Roadarmel refers to as local color. “When Omni builds a hotel, it’s important to have local color,” Roadarmel says. “Out of our 52 hotels, no two are the same. We really take in the feel of the local community. When we open in November of 2013, if you are from anywhere outside the South, when you come and stay in
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our hotel, you are going to know you are in the South. That’s the cool thing about our hotel, its local color. It’s not just some box we are throwing up everywhere.” Every feature of the hotel will subtly remind guests of Nashville’s charm. Located beside and connected to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, much of the city’s history even rings through its halls. From artwork, to décor, to furniture, each element of design is commissioned specifically with Nashville’s own flair in mind. Treble clef chandeliers, guitar fret floors and curved wood walls will accentuate its uniqueness.
The Omni Nashville will be one of the most luxurious hotels in the state and will boast 800 guest rooms and suites, including specialty amenities like motion-activated floor lights. Over 80,000-square-feet of meeting space and 660 underground parking spaces add functionality. But it’s more than just numbers and specs, the Omni’s extravagance rests in the novelty of its specific spaces. In addition to the main lobby, the lower level will include a casual three-meal restaurant, fine dining restaurant, coffee shop and honky tonk. A quick and simple place to grab any meal of the day, the Omni’s three-meal restaurant will
drive home a taste of the South with its one-of-a-kind biscuit bar, where fresh, hot biscuits will be served every 15 minutes, complete with dozens of pairings, like bacon and eggs, gravy or fried green tomatoes. The entire menu will offer local food treasures only found at the Omni. Omni will also become home to the only Bongo Java outside Hillsboro Village. “Anyone can have a Starbucks,” Roadarmel says. “Well, we don’t want a Starbucks. We want to be local, so we’re proud to announce that we’re going to name our coffee shop Bongo Java.” Daily live entertainment and electrical outlets accessible from every table will make the coffee shop more than just a caffeine pit stop. “We don’t want you to come in, grab a cup of coffee and leave,” Roadarmel says. “We want you to come hang out or check your e-mail, so we’re going to make it friendly.” Bob’s Steak and Chop House will serve as an upscale dining experience, complete with private dining areas and a 1,000-bottle wine room. The Omni’s own honky-tonk bar rounds out the first floor, offering nine 55-inch flat screens for watching games, a stage for live entertainment and two garage doors allowing the space to open to the outside public. Three of these four dining spots also provide Nashville with much-needed outdoor dining patios. Breakout meeting rooms and a 25,000square-foot ballroom make up the second level, while additional upgraded meeting rooms and a VIP boardroom occupy the third floor. Omni’s outstanding amenity deck will be found on the fourth floor with the city’s only rooftop pool and event space, towering 80-feet above 5th Avenue. Omni has even included a poolside bar and grill, 24-hour fitness center and downtown Nashville’s only full-service spa. The Omni Nashville is essentially impressive on all fronts. It’s luxury, it’s functionality, but most importantly, it’s Southern singularity.
RADNOR LAKE Known and loved by much of the Nashville population, Radnor Lake is a tranquil oasis in the midst of a buzzing city. Surrounded by suburbia in the Overton hills, the Class II-protected state park is a haven for nature of all types. Originally impounded by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company in 1914, Radnor’s 85-acre lake initially served as a water source for steam engines, and the grounds were reserved for private hunting. However, in 1923, as the ecological diversity of Radnor began to grow, all hunting rights were banned. But it was not until 1973 that the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation led the charge that officially preserved Radnor as a protected natural area. Over six decades after its initial impounding, Radnor remains the breeding ground of Nashville’s wildlife. When hiking Radnor’s trails, one may hear any of its 70 different species of birds or even catch a glimpse of a majestic bald eagle soaring over the lake. Dozens of reptiles and amphibians inhabit its waters, and unending trees, plants and wildflowers vegetate its grounds. Radnor’s scenic beauty provides a pictureperfect backdrop to please aesthetics, but its terrain offers hiking trails of varying difficulty to entertain recreation. Special programs throughout the year include astronomy night-hikes, canoe floats and wildflower walks. Radnor also helps promote environmental education and conducts research to continually improve nature protection measures, including water quality studies and a current study of coyotes and deer in the area.
Because of the special care that has been taken to preserve Radnor, it provides Nashvillians with a place of quiet solitude and a true breath of fresh air. While the peaceful lake was graced by nearly a million visitors last year, Radnor continually remains in its primitive and natural state thanks to the respect of its visitors and the hard work and dedication of its rangers.
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LP FIELD While the Titans typically storm its paintstreaked grass, LP Field is home to more than just Tennessee’s professional football team. Talent and passion of all kinds have captivated the attention of those filling its seats for over a decade. Seating just under 70,000 people, LP Field plays host to a variety of events throughout the year. Charity functions, concerts and the Country Music Association Music Festival call LP home. And now, Nashville’s hottest outdoor venue is getting a massive makeover. Nashville’s largest stadium was completed in 1999 and in 2006 was renamed LP Field. Although it serves many functions, LP Field remains the pulse of downtown on fall Sundays as fans tailgate and cheer on the Titans. With amenities including 12,000 club seats, 60 concession stands and 7,500 on-site parking spaces—just to name a few—there was already plenty to be proud of. But by the start of the Titans’ 2012 season in September, LP Field will have completed $26.8
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million in renovations to the facility. The installation of new highdefinition video screens will allow fans of any event, regardless of where they are sitting, to see the field or stage as if they were on the front row. Four times larger than the previous ones, LP Field will now boast the league’s largest outdoor video screens. Along with ramping up the visual technology, 800 additional speakers have been installed, eliminating any delay and providing crisp, clear audio. Twelve high-speed elevators serving upper deck ticket holders will improve the functionality of the stadium’s traffic, and new dining and entertainment areas will occupy the end zones. These renovations will also provide Nashville with a new restaurant available for private booking for events of up to 500 people.
LP FIELD’S NEW HIGH-SPEED ELEVATORS. With the versatility and the new and improved features LP Field has to offer, it is not only one of Nashville’s most interesting places, but it is climbing the ranks among the country’s premier open-air venues.
HISTORIC EAST NASHVILLE A once ramshackle side of town, East Nashville is now on the rise as one of the city’s trendy and eclectic hotspots. Nestled just over the Cumberland River, east of downtown Nashville, this up-andcoming district is home to a wide variety of hip hangouts. One of the newest is Barista Parlor, a funky coffee shop, breakfast and brunch restaurant on Gallatin Road. It’s anything but the run-of-the-mill coffee stop. Selectively hand-picked coffee is brewed and served in a variety of methods, including the use of a Slayer Espresso machine, with a price tag of close to $18,000; only a handful can be found throughout the United States. A special filtration machine even allows baristas to brew with water specifically filtered for precise mineral levels for optimal coffee flavor.
But maybe instead of enjoying a cup of joe, you just need to grab a few quick items at the store. The Green Wagon, located on Forrest Avenue, is the epitome of a family-run general store. Nashville’s first “green” general store opened in 2009 and strives to promote sustainable practice through their locally-made and organic products. Whether you need cleaning supplies, snacks or beauty products, owners Johnny and Tara Shields, have a carefully selected, all-natural product to fulfill your need. Going along with East Nashville’s hipster vibe, The Groove record store is thriving in an age when even CDs seem to be obsolete, let alone vinyl. But The Groove is more than a record store. It is an engagement with the music community. The
JOHNNY AND TARA SHIELDS
Groove opens its doors to the community for a variety of events, including listening previews, ticket giveaways and parties to commemorate important days in the music world. While many people would rather click a button on their computer and download their music, The Groove provides music lovers with an opportunity to participate in the tradition and community of music. Probably the most popular and notable rectified spot in East Nashville is the Five Points area. At the corner of Woodland Street, 11th Street and Clearview Avenue, Five Points anchors several bars, restaurants and shopping within a short walking distance. The updated Five Points area provides not only a trendy place to hangout, but it’s also helping reenergize the housing market in East Nashville, as well.
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It’s not just a map.
It’s
a vote of confIdence.
Families have relocated from 26 states and six foreign countries, citing Currey Ingram Academy as a major factor in their decision to move to this area. We offer individualized learning plans for every student and a robust host of athletics, arts and extracurricular activities — all on a beautiful 83-acre campus in the heart of Brentwood, Tenn.
find out more at curreyingram.org/thedifference A coed, K-12 college preparatory school that celebrates individuality, student strengths and personalized goal-setting.
What is FirstBanking? 44 Locations
More Than Banking
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It’s banking that reaches beyond.
$2 Billion in Resources 200 4th Ave. North Downtown Nashville 615.9534580
211 Commerce Street Suite 300 - Nashville 615.313.0080
113 Seaboard Lane Suite 130A - Franklin 615.373.7778
5029 Harpeth Drive Brentwood 615.324.9440
1808 Grille
1808 Grille offers a full bar, a celebrated wine list, and award-winning New American cuisine, blending traditional dishes and global flavors, with an emphasis on local, seasonal produce and the finest ingredients. Ph: (615) 340-0012 www.1808grille.com
Fleming’s
Fleming’s Nashville is an ongoing celebration of exceptional food & wine, featuring the finest prime steak and an award-winning wine list. We are located across from Centennial Park at 2525 West End Ave. Ph: (615) 342-0131 www.flemingssteakhouse.com/locations/tn/nashville
The Melting Pot
Where fun is cooked up fondue style. A four course experience in a casual elegant atmosphere.166 Second Avenue North. Reservations at meltingpot.com. Open 7 days for dinner. Ph: (615) 742-4970. www.meltingpot.com/nashville/welcome
Nero’s Grill Classic American Comfort Food
Green Hills’ favorite neighborhood restaurant! Serving crisp salads, comfort foods, fresh seafood and aged, wood grilled steaks. 2122 Hillsboro Drive. Ph: (615) 297-7777 for reservations. www.nerosgrill.com
Prime 108
Described as “Dining to Die For” by Southern Living Magazine, Prime 108 offers the finest steaks, fresh seafood and an extensive wine list inside the beautifully renovated Union Station Hotel, 1001 Broadway. Ph: (615) 620-5665 for reservations www.unionstationhotelnashville.com
Rodizio Grill
Rodizio Grill serves a continuous rotation of 14 rotisserie grilled meats carved tableside by Brazilian Gauchos. Authentic Brazilian appetizers, unlimited gourmet salad area, decadent desserts! Everything at Rodizio Grill is homemade... It’s the Brazilian Way! Coming Late 2012 to Historic Second Ave. www.rodiziogrill.com
Sheraton Nashville Downtown
Sheraton is the place where friends gather. Make Sheraton a memorable part of your next cultural experience with dinner in Speakers Bistro before the show, or dessert and cocktails in Sessions Lounge after the curtain falls. Ph: (615) 259-2000 for reservations www.sheratonnashvilledowntown.com
Sole Mio
For almost twenty years, Sole Mio has been serving up Nashville’s best award winning Italian cuisine. Featuring handmade pasta and traditional Northern Italian Sauces made fresh to order. Check us out! 311 3rd Avenue South, Nashville 37201. Ph: (615) 256-4013 www.solemionash.com
For Advertising Information Call: Glover Group Entertainment 615-373-5557
Faith, Family & Football Reconciliation of Matt Hasselbeck By Sherry Stinson Tennessee Titans quarterback Matt Hasselbeck is not a usual suspect. And by that I mean in the pro sports world of high stakes, big money and yet bigger egos, he is, well, rather commonplace. It’s not that his talent is commonplace. Rather, it’s remarkable since much of his college career was spent on the bench. It never really occurred to him until later that he had what it takes to play in the NFL. Then there was the notion of his Christian faith. Well before Tim Tebow got the lion’s share of the Christian athlete billing, Hasselbeck got there before him, squarely behind Reggie White and countless others. Matt confesses his “real deal” reputation was a professional concern early in his career. “The real Christian guys were not hard nose, fiery, passionate football players. They were labeled as soft and real smiley and not considered awesome at their jobs,” he explain. Oddly, it seems Hasselbeck’s crucible was not forged from ugliness but rather kindness— somewhere between the gridiron lines of faith and football.
How Bad Do You Want It? Today, crucibles are replaced with his kids’ athletic equipment, dog leashes and the
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photo session that preceded the interview. Hasselbeck is relaxed, open and approachable. He has kid duty today—a birthday party, a football game and pick-up responsibilities at his kids’ school. His wife, Sarah, is organizing the day’s activities, giving me time to observe and absorb the family dynamics. A former field hockey athlete, Sarah is strikingly beautiful and extraordinarily fit. Matt later shares that when he got to Boston College, the first thing he did was look for the prettiest girl (yes, Sarah) and copy her class schedule. The first thing she did was show him his athletic prowess was no better than hers. “I remember racing her up Higgins stairs … and we tied. I couldn’t beat her,” he smiles. Hasselbeck is in the mood to purge a bit today. Something is lurking in the memories of his football days at Boston College, something he needs to retrieve. He recalls a mission trip and being impressed by a leper who had stunning deformities—yet, he demonstrated the greatest happiness. “All I know is I wanted what he had,” Matt says. He talks, too, about his parents’ influence—his father, Don, a former New England Patriot’s tight end, and his mother, Betsy, who was 19 when she had him. “They were young and strict,” he recalls.
His parents did such a good job of convincing him that his grades were more important than his athletic ability, it seems that it didn’t occur to Matt until much later in life that he had an athletic gift. At the top of his game, he was raising the bar for others to achieve. It would still take time, however, to reconcile the gift with the desire, opportunity and his heart. “Right away, the guy I noticed first when I got to the NFL was Reggie White,” Hasselbeck says. “He was a beast. He was a solid, solid Christian guy, real vocal and legit about his faith. He didn’t just talk it. He lived it. Yet, on the football field, he was a complete bad ass. He would knock you over, help you up, knock you over, help you up. He was the best in the game in his position, maybe ever. It was just impressive to see a real-life example of somebody doing it on and off the field. There was nothing soft about him. There were other guys on that team the same way. Those people had an influence on me.” Hasselbeck was a sixth-round draft choice out of Boston College in 1998, a surprise to even him. The Green Bay Packers drafted him looking for a No. 2 back-up quarterback for Bret Favre, a position he had to fight for and lost. At this point in the story, I’m beginning to think we are getting closer to finding the grain of
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mustard seed hidden in those college days that needs the light of today. Perhaps, it is the realization that as you believe (in yourself), so it goes. Football, after all, is one part talent, two parts physical stamina and three parts enough self-confidence to stare defeat in the face day after day and still find the faith in yourself to go out and turn the tide tomorrow. It turns out I may be right. Matt slowly stretches his tall frame on the rented couch and remembers something a former coach at Boston College said that made him see himself in a whole new way. “At some point in my senior year, I was reading up on who was expected to get drafted and I thought, ‘If I really, really tried and gave my all, I could do this.’ Then [Boston College] coach Dan Henning said to me one day, ‘If you count the cost of what it would take to [go pro] and pay the price, you could do it.’ My parents did a real good job of stressing education to me and giving me the statistics, so I almost had this attitude, ‘I’m not going to make it.’” The mustard seed got watered at Green Bay even though he got cut from the practice squad the first year. “I honestly got fortunate to go to a great team with great coaches, with a solid view on how to play the quarterback position. It was like a Harvard Business School for quarterbacks.” Hasselbeck was traded to the Seattle Seahawks in 2001 and battled yet again for playing time with Trent Dilfer, who Matt says also played a part in molding his NFL fighting style. “Here was Trent Dilfer. We were competing for the starting quarterback position. I had never really played and had been a backup my whole career. Trent had just won a Super Bowl and he was so nice to me. At first I thought, ‘I’m not falling for this Trojan horse thing. No one is this unselfish.’ Over time I just realized he was legitimately rooting for me.” During his 10 years with the Seahawks, Hasselbeck earned the highest passing rating in the NFC, led his team to Super Bowl XL, was elected to three Pro Bowls and won the Seahawks’ prestigious Steve Largent Award. When Hasselbeck arrived in Nashville, change was afoot. A new Titans team was being birthed following the departures of head coach Jeff Fisher and controversial quarterback Vince Young. With a three-year contract in hand, Hasselbeck came knowing his job was in part to prepare rookie QB Jake Locker for the starting position. With Locker studying from the sidelines, Hasselbeck ran a how-to clinic week to week and posted a 9-7 season. “My No. 1 goal is that this team needs to win our division this year,” Hasselbeck says. “It’s not an easy goal, but that is where my focus is. In terms of numbers with statistics for myself… I really don’t pay attention to them… I am just trying to do things right and win games and, specifically, win our division.”
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Matt Hasselbeck: The Interview Nashville Arts & Entertainment: What are the greatest lessons you’ve learned in life and in football? Hasselbeck: Oh that’s a deep question… probably the value of being unselfish, especially in the context of a team—not caring who gets the credit. That’s the thing I’ve seen hold teams back and I can understand why with everything that is at stake. But if you have the ability to be unselfish, it’s a great trait and great for the group. NAE: What were your greatest challenges personally and professionally going from being a Seattle Seahawk to a Tennessee Titan? MH: It wasn’t going and getting a lease on a house or finding a school or learning an offense. It was getting my kids to give up their blind loyalty to the Seattle Seahawks and making them into Titans fans. T-Rac helped out quite a bit. The kids also had feelings . . . we flew to Seattle and the pilot flies us right over the Seahawk stadium, and my 6-year-old is looking out the window and he says really loud, “Dad, I bet that coach Pete Carroll wishes he had never got rid of you as a quarterback.”
NAE: Who has been your greatest influence in life on and off the field? MH: My parents, for sure. My parents were really, really strict. They were 19 and we had no extended family around. Also, I was a huge John Elway fan growing up. That was my guy. I wore an orange and blue jersey underneath—but clearly showing—my red and white sixth-grade [football] uniform. Not a good look, but I felt John’s jersey would help me play better. But I do remember John Elway signing autographs in high school and he wrote, “Good luck in school,” and I thought what a weird thing to say—you’re John Elway! But it got me to thinking beyond high school and college. My homework grades really went up. I’ve since written that on quite a few autographs. NAE: At age 36 you are certainly closer to the end of your career than the beginning. You’re healthy, playing well… what challenges you about where you are today? MH: I’m always trying to get better. I know where I came from in this league—not invited to the combine, got drafted in the sixth round (that was a big surprise), fought hard to make the team my first year, was cut and put on the practice squad, fought for that whole year to
get on the active roster and never did it. The next year I fought to be the No. 2 quarterback. Just working toward those goals—I remember how I worked. I worked as if I was about to be cut. I trained as if this play might be my last. NAE: What in life are you best at? MH: I’ve had people tell me a skill I have is emotional intelligence. I had to look it up. Specifically, at quarterback, I take a lot of pride in the time in between the plays in the huddle. It’s kind of a rule when the quarterback steps in the huddle no one else is allowed to talk. Players have been so trained to be quiet you have to keep the energy up and get creative. NAE: When the contract is up, what are your plans? Do you think you’ll stay in Nashville or go back to Seattle? MH: I really don’t know the answer to that question. I can see why so many players stay here when they are done playing. Around the league Nashville is kind of famous for that. When I decided last year to sign with the Titans, at least a dozen people said, “Oh boy, you’re never going to leave Nashville,” meaning, “I know a few people who went there and never came back.” —S.S.
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Who Your Friends Are When Hasselbeck was offered a one-year contract to stay at the Seattle Seahawks at the end of the 2010 season, he turned it down. San Francisco called, as did the Titans, and Hasselbeck ended up at the airport thinking he was going to San Francisco—only to find out destiny’s 48-hour ticket had Nashville stamped on it. He called his good friend Bret Favre, and asked for some veteran advice. It seems Favre had a few friends in Nashville. “He called me back in like five minutes and said, ‘Don’t worry about it. I got it all taken care of,’” smiles Hasselbeck. A guy named Tim, who just happened to have a rental home available, picked up Hasselbeck at the airport and, en route to look at the home, drove by a football fan wearing a No. 8 Seahawks jersey. Tim pulled over and showed off his passenger. The lucky fan got a few footballs thrown out the window before the car spun off. Matt continues, “At practice several weeks later that same guy came up to me and asked if I remembered him. He said his wife sent him to ask me if that was Tim McGraw in the car with me that day.” As it turns out, the answer was yes. “Yeah, when tour buses come through here, I think they are still looking for Tim and Faith and are disappointed when they see me.” Probably not.
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147 Million Orphans T-shirt The Hasselbecks are still deciding on which Nashville charities they will focus. But there’s one they seem to be trying on for size. “147 Million Orphans is one of the many charities here in Nashville we have been exposed to,” Matt says of a local organization creating awareness through its distinctive T-shirt line. “The goal is to get people to feed just one orphan. Adoption is not something we have on our radar, but the more you are exposed to the poverty so many kids live in, the harder it becomes not to do something. Where our kids go to school, many kids have been adopted and it has been really inspiring to us. It is making us consider it down the line. “And, of course, the T-shirts are really comfortable, too.” —S. S.
FALL 2012 / spring 2013
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Photo credits (LtoR): New Year’s Eve in Downtown Nashville presented by the Nashville Convention & Visitors Bureau; Trains Exhibit at Cheekwood Botanical Gardens & Museum of Art; Frist Center for the Visual Arts; Jack Daniel’s World Championship Invitational Barbecue in Lynchburg; Junie B. Jones by the Nashville Children’s Theatre; The Parthenon at Dusk; Shakespeare in the Park: Much Ado About Nothing – Jeff Frazier; Country Music Marathon & ½ Marathon; Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum; Tennessee Titans; Tennessee Repertory Theatre A Christmas Story – Henry Butler; Ryman Auditorium
Event details and ticketing available at
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
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Kiss and Mötley crüe
Sept. 4
Bridgestone Arena
Rock ‘n’ Roll doesn’t get any bigger than this! With combined album sales of almost 200 million, they remain today as the dominant powerhouses of rock music tallying 30+ chart-topping hits, countless sold out tours, and awards & accolades from around the world.
live on the Green
Sept. 6 – Oct. 11
Public Square Park
A free concert series held on Thursday evenings highlighting local artists, as well as national acts with roots in Music City. The music will appeal to a large cross section of the community and will represent some of the best talent that Nashville has to offer.
Mahler’s eighth symphony of a thousand
Sept. 7 – 9
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
Conductor Giancarlo Guerrero leads 450 musicians and singers in one of the most monumental pieces of music ever written. Featuring Nashville Symphony Chorus and Blair Children’s Chorus.
the 13th annual americana Music Festival and conference
Sept. 12 – 15
Sheraton Nashville Downtown
Seminars, panels and networking opportunities by day, a stellar lineup of musical showcases at premiere venues by night. The festival's capstone will be the annual Americana Music Association Honors & Awards at the historic Ryman Auditorium, toasting winners in six member-voted of the year categories and bestowing Lifetime Achievement Awards on several honored guests.
Legally Blonde
Sept. 13 – 29
Larry Keeton Theatre
Young Elle Woods can handle anything. When her noxious boyfriend Warner dumps her in favor of someone he considers a little more ‘top drawer’, she decides to follow him to Harvard Law School and win him back. With some help from new friends Paulette and Emmett, and her Chihuahua Bruiser, she learns that it’s so much better to be smart.
30th annual african street Sept. 14 – 16 Festival
Hadley Park
Hosted by the African American Cultural Alliance (AACA), this phenomenal, family-oriented festival has grown continuously and now attracts thousands who are interested in African and African American culture.
Kelly clarkson & the Fray with carolina liar
Bridgestone Arena
Since bursting onto the music scene 10 years ago, American Idol veteran Kelly Clarkson has sold over 20 million albums worldwide and has had 10 singles in the top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles Chart. Joining her for this show will be The Fray and Carolina Liar.
Sept. 15
> Shakespeare In The Park: Much Ado About Nothing Through Sept. 16 Centennial Park Bandshell Enjoy an enchanting evening of theatre under the stars at the 25th Annual Shakespeare in Centennial Park featuring Much Ado About Nothing directed by Denice Hicks. There will be a pre-show each night at 6:30pm. Photo Credit: Jeff Frazier First tennessee nashville predators Brent peterson celebrity Golf classic
Sept. 17 – 18
Bridgestone Arena / Vanderbilt Legends Club
Petey’s Preds Party and the Celebrity Golf Classic are highlighted by interaction with Nashville Predator players, as well as several other celebrity attendees from the sports and entertainment world.
Grand ole opry ft. dierks Bentley, Kellie pickler, and more
Sept. 18
Grand Ole Opry House
See the show that made country music famous. The unique art form we call country music owes its phenomenal rise in popularity to a live show that began more than 80 years ago. At the Opry, you can count on things happening you just can't see anywhere else. NOTE: Artist lineup is subject to change.
Zac Brown Band’s southern Ground Music and Food Festival
Sept. 21 – 22
Lawn at Riverfront Park
A two-day festival with live music and concessions available from “Cookie”, Zac Brown Band’s mobile kitchen, offering a la carte items prepared with Zac and Executive Chef Rusty Hamlin’s recipes. Also look for gourmet selections from other local restaurants.
34th annual taca Fall craft Fair
Sept. 28 – 30
Centennial Park
A signature event in Nashville, TACA’s Fall Craft Fair offers shoppers the opportunity to meet and talk with exhibiting artists, enjoy children’s activities, visit special exhibits and demonstrations, and purchase a wide variety of uniquely handcrafted art.
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bluebird on the Mountain
Sept. 22
Dyer Observatory
Showcases many of Nashville's premier singer-songwriters performing on the grounds of Dyer Observatory, offering a spectacular view of Nashville. This show will feature Shane McAnally, Brandy Clark and Marc Beeson.
> Hands On Nashville Day 2012 Sept. 22 Local Metro Schools Join more than 1,000 volunteers for the community’s largest day of service to public schools. Individuals and groups are encouraged to participate in this community-transforming event that will fill students, teachers, and parents with pride in their schools.
Sept. 22
Walk of Fame Park
Experience Music City at its finest - Country Music Hall of Fame, Music Row, Centennial Park, great Nashville Neighborhoods and an incredible street party in Downtown. The custom finisher's medal, designer goodie bag, cookie cafe & more make this Half Marathon & 5K a spectacular event. Grab your girlfriends and get ready for an unforgettable weekend!
nashville Zoo 15th Annual Harvest Days
Sept. 22 – 23
Nashville Zoo at Grassmere
Step back to the days of yore, and help the Zoo celebrate its favorite "past" time, Harvest Days, at the Grassmere Historic Farm. Harvest Days is a celebration of life at harvest time in the 1800s, featuring fun, educational activities for the whole family!
Cheekwood Harvest!
Sept. 22 – Oct. 31
Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of Art
As the glow of summer fades, color erupts from the trees and autumn flowers at Cheekwood. Celebrate the season’s changes as you wander through the gardens and find scarecrows hidden among the trails. Take home your favorite pumpkin from the patch and see a breathtaking assortment of fall’s most famous flower, the Crysanthemum. With weekly special events, live music, ‘Art’ivities in the studio, pumpkin patch, and the return of Trains!, there’s something for everyone to celebrate the season!
Carrie Underwood
Sept. 23
Bridgestone Arena
Carrie Underwood is a five-time Grammy Award winner, a member of the Grand Ole Opry, the 2009 Academy of Country Music Entertainer of the Year, and three-time CMA and ACM Female Vocalist winner. Special guest Hunter Hayes.
science in Toyland
Through Sept. 23
Adventure Science Center
Utilizing toys to demonstrate scientific principles and encourage children to experiment, this exhibit combines the fun of playing games with problem solving to foster a positive attitude towards science, and provides children with a rich mix of discovery and experimentation in a safe and dynamic environment.
23rd Annual international bluegrass Music Awards
Sept. 27
Ryman Auditorium
This awards show is a salute to the year's outstanding achievements during a fast-paced evening of fabulous performances and the awards - the most anticipated night of the bluegrass year.
Martina Mcbride
Sept. 28
Ryman Auditorium
The Grand Ole Opry star brings her intimate "One Night" tour to the historic Ryman Auditorium, taking her fans on a unique musical journey that promises a lot of interaction and memories.
Full Moon pickin’ party
Sept.28
Warner Parks Equestrian Center
Family-friendly evenings featuring Middle Tennessee's finest bluegrass music under the light of a full moon. Pickers form circles around the grounds, while several headliners are featured on stage. Monies raised go directly back into the Parks to ensure preservation, protection and funding of educational programs and special projects.
Cumberland river Dragon boat Festival
Sept. 29
Riverfront Park
A fun, unique cultural event featuring adrenaline-pumping action, dragon boat racing grows in popularity each year. Teams of 20 paddlers, a drummer and steerer, race in authentic Hong Kong-style 46-foot-long dragon boats - often wearing costumes.
Constable: oil sketches from the Victoria and Albert Museum
Through Sept. 30
Frist Center for the Visual Arts
Constable: Oil Sketches from the Victoria and Albert Museum centering on two major works by John Constable in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A), the full-size oil sketches for The Hay Wain and The Leaping Horse.
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
women’s Half Marathon
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Event details and ticketing available at
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
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gotye
Oct. 3
Ryman Auditorium
Australian singer-songwriter Wally De Backer, known onstage as Gotye, topped the Billboard 100 with his break out hit “Somebody That I Used to Know” featuring Kimbra.
nextbignashville presents southland
Oct. 3 – 6
Multiple Music Venues
Like its predecessor NextBigNashville, Southland promises four days of showcases, concerts, VIP parties, and music business workshops while adding outdoor stages, an arts village and more interactive fun. The cornerstone of the event is the live performances showcasing local Nashville talent as well as regional, national, & international talent at venues all over town.
international black Film Festival of nashville
Oct. 4 – 7
TBA
The International Black Film Festival of Nashville brings African American and other communities together to showcase their work as emerging and skilled independent filmmakers, actors, composers, screenwriters, directors and other film industry professionals.
> Celebrate Nashville Cultural Festival Oct. 6 Centennial Park This annual festival exists to celebrate and embrace cultural diversity through respecting, understanding and appreciating the cultures of the Greater Nashville population. The festival has reached more than 30 cultures through dance, music, visual arts, children’s area, global villages and exotic food samplings. First saturday Art Crawl Downtown
Oct. 6
The Arcade
Every first Saturday of the month, multiple downtown galleries open their doors to avid art lovers as well as anyone else that is just curious to see what the Gallery Crawl is all about. Over 1,000 people attend this very popular monthly event. Most galleries serve free wine and other refreshments.
nashville beer Festival
Oct. 6
Public Square Park
More than 80 craft beers from over 40 breweries, including local & specialty brews, will be featured at this annual event presented by Frugal MacDoogal.
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Oct. 11 – Nov. 3
Andrew Johnson Theater
On the fog-bound streets of Victorian-era London, Henry Jekyll’s experiments with exotic “powders and tinctures” have brought forth his other self - Edward Hyde, a sensualist and villain free to commit the sins Jekyll is too civilized to comprehend.
southern Festival of books
Oct. 12 – 14
War Memorial Plaza
An annual celebration that features more than 250 authors from around the nation and in every genre for presentations, readings, panel discussions and book signings.
oktoberfest
Oct. 13
Historic Germantown
Held in the Historic Germantown area of Nashville, Oktoberfest features authentic German food and beverages, 4 live music stages, Polka dancing, kids activities, arts and crafts, and more!
ghouls at grassmere
Oct. 18 – 28
Nashville Zoo at Grassmere
Kids of all ages will enjoy the Trick or Treat Trail packed with treat stations, and the festival with games, an inflatable slide, the Gypsy Mystery Maze, and the Monster Mash. For the more adventurous youngsters, the Haunted Hayride is back with some new “tricks and treats” of its own!
8th Annual Franklin wine Festival
Oct. 19
Factory at Franklin
Enjoy over 300 wines from the finest winemakers around the world paired with culinary offerings from several of the Middle Tennessee's finest chefs, caterers, and other specialty food exhibitors. Benefits Big Brothers Big Sisters of Middle Tennessee.
The Sleeping Beauty with The nashville symphony orchestra
Oct. 19 – 21
Andrew Jackson Hall
With all the makings of a magical fairy tale, The Sleeping Beauty tells the story of Princess Aurora who is cursed to sleep for 100 years by an evil witch and can only be awoken by the kiss of a handsome prince.
i run for the party’s Halloween Festival and 5K Fun run
Oct. 20
Music Row Roundabout
Slither, crawl, or fly through this course filled with funny, frightening, and fabulous costumes. The race concludes with Nashville’s biggest Halloween block party!
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shaquille o'neal presents All star Comedy Jam
Oct. 20
Ryman Auditorium
The All Star Comedy Jam brand has showcased many of the top urban comedians in the country and has spawned highly popular 1-hour television specials that aired annually since 2009 and have become one of the highest-rated comedy specials on cable.
Music and Molasses Festival
Oct. 20 – 21
Tennessee Agricultural Museum
An annual country celebration of the harvest season with two music stages, storytelling, country cloggers, Bluegrass, Tennessee crafts, special demonstrations that can be enjoyed with cooking and tasting at the sorghum mill, and much more!
Anything Goes
Oct. 23 – 28
Andrew Jackson Hall
When the S.S. American heads out to sea, etiquette and convention get tossed out the portholes as two unlikely pairs set off on the course to true love… proving that sometimes destiny needs a little help from a crew of singing sailors, an exotic disguise and some good old-fashioned blackmail.
Annual Jack Daniel's world Championship invitational barbecue
Oct. 27
Lynchburg, TN
Thousands head to the Hollow for the annual Jack Daniel’s World Championship Invitational Barbecue, an event that began in 1989 and is today considered one of the most prestigious barbecue competitions in the world.
pumpkinfest
Oct. 27
Downtown Franklin
This festival fills Main Street with all things fall-related: pumpkins, costumes, activities for children, full schedule of entertainment, chili cookoff, hayrides, trick-or-treating, and fall craft booths.
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> El Dia de los Muertos Oct. 27 Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of Art The festivals of Mexico & Latin America are world renowned for their colorful decorations, energetic music, and cultural significance, demonstrating the culture’s strong sense of love and respect for one’s ancestors while celebrating the continuance of life. Learn more about this unique holiday: tour the altars, shop in the Mexican marketplace, explore traditional arts and crafts, and enjoy live music and dance. Oct. 28
Ryman Auditorium
Her mellifluous voice, accomplished guitar playing and classic catalog of blues, folk, R&B, and pop songs have made her one of the most acclaimed artists of her generation.
Halloween Movie night Featuring nosferatu with organist Tom Trenney
Oct. 29
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
Organ whiz Tom Trenney returns for this annual tradition -a screening of a scary silent movie classic, accompanied by the seat-shaking sound of the Martin Foundation Concert Organ.
goblins in the garden
Oct. 30
Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of Art
Scare up your favorite silly or spooky costume and join us for a ghoulish good time at the 6th annual Goblins in the Garden. We’ll be trick-ortreating our way through the gardens at 10:30am from Botanic Hall’s Massey Auditorium, as well as enjoying frighteningly fun entertainment and crafts. Count on spooky surprises, special treats, and a howling good time!
Tennessee Titans 2012 Home Schedule
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
bonnie raitt
The Tennessee Titans play their homes games at LP Field in Nashville, TN. Visit NowPlayingNashville.com for ticket and game information. DATE Sun. Sept. 9 Sun. Sept. 23 Thurs. Oct. 11 Sun. Oct. 28 Sun. Nov. 4 Sun. Dec. 2 Mon. Dec. 17 Sun. Dec. 30
OPPONENT New England Patriots Detroit Lions Pittsburgh Steelers Indianapolis Colts Chicago Bears Houston Texans New York Jets Jacksonville Jaguars
TIME Noon Noon 7:20pm Noon Noon Noon 7:30pm Noon 83
Event details and ticketing available at
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
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David sedaris
Nov. 1
Ryman Auditorium
NPR Humorist and Bestselling Author of “Naked,” “Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim,” and “Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk.” With sardonic wit and incisive social critiques, David Sedaris has become one of America’s pre-eminent humor writers.
> The 46th Annual CMA Awards Nov. 1 Bridgestone Arena It’s County music’s biggest night! This event will recognize the best and brightest performers, songwriters, record producers and music video directors in the industry.
Sweet Charity
Nov. 1 – 17
Larry Keeton Theatre
Originally directed and choreographed by Bob Fosse, the show tells the story of unlucky-in-love Charity Hope Valentine, a dance hall hostess who always gives her heart and her dreams to the wrong man. The show’s iconic choreography will be set by Adams-Johnson while the show’s direction will be handled by Jamie London and musical direction by Ginger Newman.
You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown
Nov. 1 – Dec. 23
Nashville Children’s Theatre
Linus, Lucy, Sally, Schroeder, Snoopy and Charlie Brown – the most beloved gang of kids in America – will take you for a wise and hilarious romp through the world of PEANUTS. Based on The Comic Strip "Peanuts"by Charles M. Schulz
wine Down Main street
Nov. 2
Downtown Franklin
Shop, taste wines, and sample food from area restaurants while listening to live music as you Wine Down Main Street. Participants receive a booklet listing the wines and descriptions, along with a commemorative wine glass.
blue and gray Days
Nov. 2 – 3
Historic Carnton Plantation
A mobile living history with historical discussions from local historians, reenactments, and the chance to view original items from the Battle of Franklin.
opry at The ryman
Nov. 2 – Dec. 29
Ryman Auditorium
The show that made country music famous returns to its most famous home in downtown Nashville. A 2-hour show that features a line up of new stars, superstars, and legends of country music in each show. Tuesdays, Saturdays, & Sundays in November and December.
nashville puppy Up! walk
Nov. 4
Centennial Park
Exciting entertainment, demos, health fairs and booths, plus vendors for both pooch & owner. Plus don't miss our easy 2-mile walk around Centennial Park's beautiful Lake Watauga.
Taylor swift: speak nowTreasures from the world Tour
Through Nov. 4
Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
Explore the superstar’s record-breaking world tour featuring dozens of costumes, instruments, set pieces and props from the six-time Grammy winner's acclaimed 2011-12 Speak Now World Tour, which entertained more than 1.5 million fans over 111 shows in 19 countries spanning four continents.
nashville Jewish Film Festival
Nov. 7 – 15
Belcourt Theatre
Celebrating its 12th year, the Nashville Jewish Film Festival brings Jewish history and culture to the Nashville community through educational, entertaining and thought-provoking Jewish-themed films, panel discussions, and special events.
Little House On The Prairie Through Nov. 9
Cumberland County Playhouse
Follow the Ingalls family‘s journey westward to South Dakota where Ma and Pa Ingalls strive to make a better life for their children. A life-affirming story that celebrates the pioneering spirit and values on which our country was founded – a spirit still alive today.
Christmas Village
Nov. 9 – 11
Tennessee State Fairgrounds
A variety of gift items offered by more than 250 merchants from all over the U.S., including: toys for all ages, clothing for children and adults, jewelry, food items, pottery, collectibles and unusual pieces for the "person who has everything".
i run For The party / Hard rock Cafe’s nashville ½ Marathon
Nov. 10
Downtown Nashville
This route takes you through some of Nashville’s most beautiful and historic scenery: the Gulch, East Nashville, and other lively neighborhoods will cheer you on with full support as you run with the last quarter mile on a triumphant downhill through the honkytonks of Broadway.
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Meet your best Friend at the Zoo Day
Nov. 10
Nashville Zoo at Grassmere
One of the biggest offsite pet adoption events, drawing thousands of guests from around Middle Tennessee. The event will invite area humane societies, animal shelters and pet adoption agencies to bring adoptees to the Zoo’s parking lot for a fun-filled day.
> Irving Berlin’s White Christmas Nov. 13 – 18 Andrew Jackson Hall Irving Berlin’s White Christmas tells the story of two showbiz buddies putting on a show in a magical Vermont inn and finding their perfect mates in the bargain. Full of dancing, laughter and some of the greatest songs ever written, Irving Berlin’s White Christmas promises to be a merry and bright theatrical experience for the whole family! Photo Credit: © Carder Photography, 2011
Nov. 14 – 18
Street Theatre
In the turmoil of the Vietnam War, an American soldier and a Vietnamese girl fall in love, only to be separated during the fall of Saigon. Their struggles to find each other over the ensuing years ends in tragedy for her and a fighting chance for the child he never knew he had.
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
Nov. 16 – Dec. 23
Cumberland County Playhouse
Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s joyous retelling of the Biblical saga of Joseph and his brothers returns to the Playhouse stage in a glorious holiday production.
The radio City Christmas spectacular starring the rockettes
Nov. 16 – Dec. 24
Grand Ole Opry House
The Radio City Christmas Spectacular, starring the world-famous Rockettes, returns to Nashville with dazzling scenery, costumes and lighting, as well as a cast and crew of nearly 100 members.
Lorrie Morgan's Enchanted Nov. 16 – Dec. 25 Christmas Dinner and show
Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center – Tennessee Ballroom
Share the wonder and warmth of a down-home Christmas with country music superstar & Grand Ole Opry member Lorrie Morgan. Featuring songs from Lorrie's popular “Merry Christmas from London” along with the many hits of her platinum-selling, 16-album career.
Dr. Dog
Nov. 17
Marathon Music Works
The Philadelphia-based Dr. Dog are part of a long tradition of D.I.Y. pop oddballs who blend unapologetic '60s pop worship with lo-fi recording techniques and an apparent disregard for current trends.
Vanderbilt Commodores Football vs. Tennessee Volunteers
Nov. 17
Vanderbilt Stadium
north pole Express with santa
Nov. 24, Dec. 8, 15
Tennessee Central Railway Museum
Come ride with Santa on the Tennessee Central Railway Museum’s North Pole Express excursion train to Watertown or Lebanon!
All That Classical Jazz
Nov. 29 – Dec. 1
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
No one quite blended classical music and jazz the way George Gershwin did, and his Piano Concerto is an unmatched blend of symphonic form and syncopated swing. Sensational pianist Terrence Wilson brings it all brilliantly to life.
> WHERE TO FIND ONE-STOP HOLIDAY SHOPPING
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
Miss Saigon: In Concert
Event details and ticketing available at
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Holiday Charity Guide: GivingMatters.com This holiday season, give a gift that honors your recipient and impacts our community by making a charitable gift in the name of a friend or loved one. Visit GivingMatters.com for detailed information on more than 1,200 Middle Tennessee nonprofits, and find organizations that appeal to the interests of everyone on your list. Secure, tax-exempt, online donations to hundreds of local charities can be made directly through GivingMatters.com. Or do you want to put a new spin on charitable giving? Share the joy of giving in a simple card with Holiday GIVING CARDS in the amount of your choosing. Recipients of Giving Cards can redeem their cards to benefit the charity of their choice, anywhere in the country. Learn more about Giving Cards at cfmt.org/givingcards.
Connect with GivingMatters.com on Facebook and Twitter! 85
You support the arts
we support the artist Josh writes music and plays several instruments. But when Josh was unemployed, he had to sell his instruments to get by. When you give to Goodwill, you keep Josh in tune. The simple act of donating the things that you no longer need means job training and opportunities for thousands of Tennesseans who have difficulty finding employment. Donate Today and Change a Life.
NEW Nashville Location
615.224.2665 Julie Pena, md
Board Certified Dermatologist
Michelle Dobson, MMS, PA-C
We are dedicated to skin cancer awareness. Call to schedule your annual full-body exam.
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6606 Charlotte Pike, Suite 106 Nashville, Tennessee 37209 (Behind Firehouse Subs) giveit2goodwill.org
www.ssdermandlaser.com 4/30/12 3:52 PM
preparing for the performance of life
Reservations 615.620.5665
Great Memories are Better When Shared Sheraton is where friends gather. Make Sheraton a part of your next memorable cultural experience with dinner in Speakers Bistro before the show, or cocktails in Sessions Lounge after the curtain falls. enjoy our superb cuisine, elegant décor, drink specials and more
Call 615 259 2000 for Reservations
©2011 Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Sheraton and its logo are the trademarks of Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc., or its affiliates.
Event details and ticketing available at
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
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Christmas Dinner Theatre: The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
Dec. 7 – 22
Arts Center of Cannon County
The hilarious tale of overachievers’ angst chronicles the experience of six adolescent outsiders vying for the spelling championship of a lifetime.
> Dickens of A Christmas Dec. 8 – 9 Downtown Franklin Old-fashioned Victorian Christmas recreated from the pages of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol and other Dickens' tales on Franklin’s Historic Main Street. Each year more than 200 volunteers participate in the event as characters from Dickens’ stories or as street performers. Also features tasty Victorian treats, musicians, horse drawn carriage rides and a holiday bazaar. Nashville’s Nutcracker featuring nashville symphony orchestra
Dec. 9 – 23
Andrew Jackson Hall
For your family’s ultimate holiday treat, Nashville Ballet is presenting its encore performance of Nashville’s Nutcracker. This charming ballet embraces all of the time-honored traditions of this story while placing them in the 1897 Tennessee Centennial Exposition.
straight no Chaser Holiday Concert
Dec. 13
Ryman Auditorium
If the phrase “male a cappella group” conjures up an image of students in blue blazers, ties, and khakis singing traditional college songs on ivied campuses… think again. Straight No Chaser (SNC) are neither strait-laced nor straight-faced, but neither are they vaudeville-style kitsch.
TobyMac
Dec. 14
Bridegestone Arena
The ascension of TobyMac’s solo career has been nothing short of spectacular. In an era of declining music sales he has consistently defied the odds and has seen his sales increase with each new album release.
A Christmas Carol
Through Dec. 16
Larry Keeton Theatre
Touting the optimistic sentiment that “it’s never too late to change”, enjoy all the nostalgia of the holidays wrapped up in this lively musical retelling!
Amy grant and Vince gill: Christmas at the ryman
Dec. 19 – 20
Ryman Auditorium
Amy Grant and Vince Gill bring their “Twelve Days of Christmas” tour to the Ryman stage for two nights marking the sixth year the couple has performed the holiday special. The set will feature traditional holiday songs, as well as some of Amy and Vince’s biggest hits.
Handel’s Messiah
Dec. 20 – 22
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
The Nashville Symphony and Chorus ring in the holiday season with their annual performances of Handel's brilliant oratorio Messiah.
A Christmas Story
Through Dec. 22
Andrew Johnson Theater
Based on the motion picture, A Christmas Story is humorist Jean Shepherd’s memoir of growing up in the Midwest in the 1940s. This irresistible piece of Americana is a cult classic and is guaranteed to warm the heart and tickle the funny bone.
Mrs. Bob Cratchit's Wild Christmas Binge
Through Dec. 22
Boiler Room Theatre
A playful, cracked look at the perennial Dickens Christmas classic about mean Ebenezer Scrooge and his discovering the true meaning of Christmas through the visitation of Three Ghosts.
Scrooge! The Musical
Through Dec. 22
Towne Centre Theatre
In 1970, renowned writer-composer-lyricist Leslie Bricusse adapted the classic Charles Dickens tale A Christmas Carol into the hit screen musical Scrooge! Now available as a charming stage musical, Scrooge! has enjoyed a hugely successful tour of England.
> A Country Christmas Through Dec. 25 Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center The 29th annual A Country Christmas includes more than 2 million lights and more than a dozen shows and attractions, including an interactive, bigger-than-life ice sculpture world, ICE! Ft. DreamWorks’ Shrek the Halls, the Radio City Christmas Spectacular featuring the Radio City Rockettes, Lorrie Morgan’s Enchanted Christmas Dinner & Show, and more. 88
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Holiday at Cheekwood
Through Dec. 30
Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of Art
Enjoy the sights and sounds of the holiday season with us as a part of our annual holiday festivities. Enjoy artfully trimmed trees representing the many sides of Cheekwood, from art and gardens to music and education.
Del McCoury band & Keller Dec. 31 williams
Marathon Music Works
For fifty years, Del McCoury's music has defined authenticity for hard core bluegrass fans as well as a growing number of fans among those only vaguely familiar with the genre.
Franklin American Mortgage Music City bowl
Dec. 31
LP Field
One of the hottest post-season College Bowl games in America as the SEC and ACC square off in Music City. Broadcast live on ESPN, the Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl is Nashville's Holiday Tradition and is celebrating its 15th Anniversary.
bash on broadway: new years Eve Celebration
Dec. 31
Downtown Nashville
Ring in the new year and rock out the old with thousands of your closest friends at Nashville’s New Year’s Eve party on Lower Broadway.
iCE! Featuring Dreamworks’ shrek The Halls
Through Jan. 1
Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center
The ICE! artisans will be bringing DreamWorks Animation's Shrek the Halls to Nashville in the form of 2 million pounds of larger-than-life colorful ice sculptures and incredible 20-foot-tall ice slides. Relive the heartwarming story as you stroll through this amazing attraction featuring your favorite characters: Shrek, Fiona, Donkey, Gingy and Puss in Boots as they celebrate Christmas in their own special way.
Event details and ticketing available at
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LOCAL SHOPPING shopping Malls
boutique shopping Betsy’s, 2218 Bandywood Dr., Nashville Blush Boutique, 4326 Harding Pike, Nashville Boutique Bella, 2817 West End Ave., # 111, Nashville Coco, 4239 Harding Pike, Nashville Designer Renaissance, 2822 Bransford Ave., Nashville Ecology, 4009 Hillsboro Pike, Nashville Emmaline, 400 Main St., #130, Franklin Fire Finch, 1818 21st Ave. South, Nashville and 305 Church Street, Nashville Flavour, 1522 Demonbreun St., Nashville Gìn-ò Boutique, 118 4th Ave. South, Franklin H. Audrey, 4027 Hillsboro Pike, Nashville Habit, 2209 Bandywood Dr., Nashville Haven: Sanctuary of Style, 343 Main St., Franklin Hemline, 4025 Hillsboro Pike, #504, Nashville Imogene + Willie, 2601 12th Ave. S, Nashville Ivey, 7020 Church St. E., Nashville
J. McLaughlin, 4027 Hillsboro Pike, Nashville J. Michael’s Clothiers, 3305 West End Ave., Nashville Jamie, 4317 Harding Pike, Nashville Katy K’s Ranch Dressing, 2407 12th Ave. S., Nashville Local Honey, 2009 Belmont Blvd., Nashville Moda, 2511 12th Ave. South, Nashville Muse Boutique, 2525 West End Ave. Ste 2505, Nashville Pangaea, 1721 21st Ave. South, Nashville Pastiche, 6031 Highway 100, Nashville Perfect Pair, 2209 Bandywood Dr., Nashville Philanthropy, 432 Main St., Franklin Posh, 1809 21st Ave. South, Nashville and 4027 Hillsboro Pike, Nashville Scarlett Begonia, 2805 West End Ave., Nashville Serendipity Emporium, 2301 12th Ave. South, Nashville Smack Clothing, 2201 Elliston Place, Nashville Studio 615, 2922 West End Ave.., Nashville The Cotton Mill, Grace’s Plaza, Nashville UAL, 2918 West End Ave., Nashville
gift shops A Thousand Faces, 1720 21st Ave. S., Nashville Corzine and Company, 4003 Hillsboro Rd, Nashville. Curious Heart Emporium, 2832 Bransford Ave., Nashville Fabu, 4606 Charlotte Pike, Nashville
Happiness Place, 2144 Bandywood Dr., Nashville Hot Pink, 231 Franklin Rd., Brentwood Ilex, 4542 Harding Rd., Nashville Pear Tree Avenue, 237 Franklin Rd., Brentwood Rock Paper Scissors, 317 Main St., Franklin Social Graces, 1704 21st Ave. S., Nashville Ten Thousand Villages, 3500 Hillsboro Pike, Nashville The Dotted Line, 2209 Bandywood Dr., Nashville The Registry, 335 Main St., Franklin
Home Decor Ash Blue, 2170 Bandywood Dr., Nashville Bella Linea, 2133 Bandywood Dr., Nashville Curtain Exchange, 4103 Hillsboro Cir., Nashville Ferguson Bath and Kitchen Gallery, 3201 Powell Ave. #B, Nashville Inside Out, 149 Wilson Pike, Brentwood Kenny and Co., 303 11th Ave. S., Nashville Metropolis Home Décor, 1017 Fatherland St., East Nashville Noveau Classics of Nashville, 3201 Belmont Blvd., Nashville ReDo Home & Design, 300 Public Square, Franklin Renaissance Tile and Bath, 1625 Broadway #100, Nashville Retropolitan, 1813 21st Ave. S., Nashville The Iron Gate, 338 Main St., Franklin Urban Décor, 901 Main St., East Nashville Urban Patio, 1200 Villa Place, Nashville
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
Cool Springs Mall – Brentwood/Franklin Hill Center at Green Hills Indian Lake Village – Hendersonville Opry Mills Mall Prime Outlets – Lebanon Rivergate Mall The Avenue – Murfreesboro The Mall at Green Hills
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Event details and ticketing available at
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
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nashville new years resolution run
Jan. 1
Downtown Nashville
After you countdown the last few seconds of 2012 and watch the music note drop on another year, start your New Year’s Day with the Nashville Resolution Run.
> Mozart & Strauss: Lovers and Pranksters Jan. 10 – 12 Schermerhorn Symphony Center Two tone poems by Richard Strauss bookend this concert, beginning with the wild rush of violins that opens the passionate Don Juan. Brimming with feverish emotion, this tale of the legendary lover is followed by Polish composer Karol Szymanowski’s rarely performed Violin Concerto, an equally sensual piece that will feature the spirited musicianship of soloist Jennifer Koh. A late masterpiece, Mozart’s Symphony No. 39 practically erupts with the composer’s virtuosity, and the evening closes on a playful note with Strauss’ musical tale of The Merry Prankster. Photo by Janette Beckman
nashville boat and sportshow
Jan. 10 – 13
Nashville Convention Center
The 26th Annual Nashville Boat and Sportshow features more than 300 boats from fishing boats to large yachts and houseboats, giving outdoor enthusiasts the Mid-South's largest selection of watercraft in the state.
brian Alfred: it's Already the End of the world
Through Jan. 13
Frist Center for the Visual Arts
A Brooklyn-based video artist and painter, Alfred employs seductive colors, abstract shapes and coolly detached photo-based imagery to address such themes as revolution, vulnerability and government surveillance in contemporary life.
Martin Luther King Jr. Day – Hands on nashville
Jan. 12 – 16
Throughout Nashville Area
More than 800 volunteers take part in Hands On Nashville’s largest-ever Martin Luther King Jr. Day service event.
bank of America pops series: nashville swings
Jan. 17 – 19
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
Put on your dancing shoes and relive the heyday of the big band era when the orchestra teams up with some of Nashville’s finest jazz musicians for an evening of classic swing. We’ll pay tribute to the great legacy of Glenn Miller, Tommy Dorsey, Woody Herman and many others! Albert-George Schram, conductor.
Justin bieber
Jan. 18
Bridgestone Arena
He’s dominated pop culture and social media for more than two years, Bieber Fever is taking Nashville by storm, leaving girls of all ages wishing he was their “Boyfriend.”
nashville Auto Fest
Jan. 19 – 20
Tennessee State Fairgrounds
The 21st edition of the Nashville Auto Fest features collector and hot rod cars, contents and live entertainment. The Top 50 vehicles will be named, as well as awards offered in special categories including Best of Show, People's Choice and more.
Catch Me If You Can
Jan. 22 – 27
Andrew Jackson Hall
The high-flying story of Frank W. Abagnale, Jr., a teen who runs away from home in search of the glamorous life. With nothing more than his boyish charm, a big imagination & millions of dollars in forged checks, Frank successfully poses as a pilot, a doctor & a lawyer--living the high life & winning the girl of his dreams. But when Frank’s lies catch the attention of FBI Agent Carl Hanratty, Carl chases Frank to the end... and finds something he never expected.
Don’t Tell Me I Can’t Fly
Jan. 24 – Feb. 10
Nashville Children’s Theatre
Meet Tonia – an artistic 9 year-old with fantastic dreams of a giant future. Tonia's mom wants her to be like a doll, perfectly mannered and always the same size. Tonia's dad wants her to blend into the crowd in a world where African-Americans who stand tall are easier to cut down.
Monterey Jazz Festival on Tour: featuring Dee Dee bridgewater & Christian Mcbride
Jan. 25
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
Since its inception in 1958, the Monterey Jazz Festival has featured the music’s greatest legends, and this very special presentation will capture the festival’s adventurous, exuberant spirit with an evening of joyful fun, classic songs and dynamic improvisation. Stunning vocalist Dee Dee Bridgewater joins bassist Christian McBride and his quintet for a tribute to the longestrunning jazz festival in the world.
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Rossini gives us his madcap version of the classic fairy tale Cinderella. Will the beautiful Cinderella make it to the royal ball and capture the heart of the handsome prince or will her evil stepsisters stand in the way of her dreams?
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Tennessee Flea Market
Jan. 25 – 27
Tennessee State Fairgrounds
Considered among the top ten flea markets in the country, dealers and vendors from 30 states offer their wares to the buying public. Find a huge variety of gifts, antiques, collectibles, jewelry, arts and crafts, tools, house wares, handmade clothing, and hundreds of thousands of other items each month.
Zoo run run
Jan. 26
Nashville Zoo at Grassmere
Unleash the beast, and stick to those New Year’s resolutions by signing up for the Nashville Zoo’s annual Zoo Run Run, a 5K route that twists and turns throughout the Zoo with surprising views around every corner.
Tennessee Horticultural Expo
Jan. 2013
Nashville Airport Marriott
A collective meeting of the organizations in Tennessee including: Tennessee Farm Wine Association, Tennessee Fruit and Vegetable Association, Tennessee Flower Growers Association, Tennessee Viticulture and Oenological Society and the Tennessee Farmers Market Association.
Event details and ticketing available at
> Cinderella featuring Nashville Symphony Orchestra Jan. 25 – 29 James K. Polk Theatre
nashville predators 2012-2013 Home schedule
2012 PrEsEAsON sCHEDuLE DATE OPPONENT Tue. Sept. 25 St. Louis Blues Sat. Sept. 29 Carolina Hurricanes
TIME 7pm 7pm
2012-2013 rEGuLAr sEAsON sCHEDuLE DATE OPPONENT Sat. Oct. 13 St. Louis Blues Tue. Oct. 16 Colorado Avalanche Thurs. Oct. 18 Vancouver Canucks Sat. Oct. 20 Pittsburgh Penguins Thurs. Nov. 8 Calgary Flames Sat. Nov. 10 St. Louis Blues Tue. Nov. 13 Los Angeles Kings Thurs. Nov. 15 New York Islanders Wed. Nov. 21 Dallas Stars Sat. Nov. 24 Columbus Blue Jackets Tue. Nov. 27 Edmonton Oilers Thurs. Nov. 29 New York Rangers Sat. Dec. 1 Minnesota Wild Tue. Dec. 11 Calgary Flames Sat. Dec. 15 Detroit Red Wings Tue. Dec. 18 Tampa Bay Lightning Thurs. Dec. 27 Philadelphia Flyers Sat. Dec. 29 Washington Capitals Tue. Jan. 8 Chicago Blackhawks Sat. Jan. 12 Columbus Blue Jackets Tue. Jan. 15 Dallas Stars
TIME 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm
Sat. Jan. 19 Mon. Jan. 21 Thurs. Feb. 7 Tue. Feb. 12 Thurs. Feb. 14 Sat. Feb. 16 Mon. Feb. 18 Fri. Feb. 22 Tue. Feb. 26 Thurs. Feb. 28 Tue. Mar. 5 Sat. Mar. 9 Tue. Mar. 19 Thurs. Mar. 21 Sat. Mar. 23 Thurs. Mar. 28 Mon. Apr. 1 Sat. Apr. 6 Tue. Apr. 9 Thurs. Apr. 11
Chicago Blackhawks Los Angeles Kings Anaheim Ducks Florida Panthers Phoenix Coyotes Anaheim Ducks Boston Bruins Vancouver Canucks Edmonton Oilers St. Louis Blues Ottawa Senators Minnesota Wild Phoenix Coyotes San Jose Sharks Columbus Blue Jackets Detroit Red Wings Colorado Avalanche Chicago Blackhawks San Jose Sharks Detroit Red Wings
7pm 5pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 5pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
The Nashville Predators play their homes games at Bridgestone Arena in Downtown Nashville. Visit NowPlayingNashville.com for ticket and game information.
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www.davidsonacademy.com Preschool—12th Grade
615.860.5300
Preparing students for college, life, and eternity
Cultivated performing arts program Competitive athletics College-prep academics Old Natchez Country Club is a beautiful venue for many social occasions such as: * Wedding Receptions * Rehearsal Dinners * Bridesmaid Luncheons * Holiday Parties * Fundraising Gala’s * Corporate and Charitable Golf Outings
Christ-centered worldview
Our central location in Williamson County along with the beauty of the setting and first class service make Old Natchez Country Club the ideal venue for your special event.
115 Gardengate Drive, Franklin, TN 37069 615-373-3200 • www.oldnatchezcc.com
Think globally. Print locally.
www.davidsonacademy.com
Preschool—12th Grade
Preparing students for college, life, and eternity
615.860.5300
Cultivated performing arts program Competitive athletics College-prep $ :25/' 2) 35,17 6 2 / 8 7 , 2 1 6academics As one of middle Tennessee’s oldest printers, our roots worldview run deep. Christ-centered Not just in the local community, but across the globe. After all, we’re part of a nationwide network of commercial printers. But more than that, we’re also participants in the worldwide movement to sustain the planet. In fact, we recently became the first full-service commercial printer in Nashville to be certified by the Forest Stewardship Council. Now one of the areas most trusted companies is one of the most ecologically responsible, too. McQuiddy Printing. 711 Spence Lane, Nashville, TN 37217 (615) 366-6565 or (800) 882-4444 www.mcquiddy.com
At Lipscomb, we’re serious about our business… Tennessee’s only Master’s Degree in Human Resources featuring a concentration in conflict management. Southeast’s number one finance program, based on three year return on investment (2009-2011), as measured in the annual TVA Investment Challenge competition with teams from 25 universities. Nation’s first Student Center for the Public Trust, a student-led program sponsored by NASBA’s Center for the Public Trust and designed to improve business ethics in America. Lipscomb Business Magazine is now on sale at selected newsstands near you. Published and distributed by Glover Group Entertainment, Inc. (615-373-5557)
business.lipscomb.edu COB Mag Ad2.indd 1
8/28/12 9:04 AM
Get your life back At Pinnacle Health, we can help relieve chronic pain and get you back on your feet. • chronic back pain • knee and/or hip pain • tendonitis • shin splints We also offer laser therapy to help you get your life back faster. These painless, high-powered lasers help relieve chronic pain and stimulate tissue regeneration.
Put pain behind you and enjoy what's important!
pinnaclehealth.biz
/ 615.656.7900
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
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spbgMA bluegrass Music Awards
Jan. 31 – Feb. 3
Sheraton Music City Hotel
A four-day event featuring performances by well-known bluegrass performers, an awards show, workshops, band showcases, exhibit booths and networking with representatives from recording companies, agencies, promoters and other industry leaders.
40th Annual nashville Heart gala
Feb. 2
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
A very special 40th Annual Nashville Heart Gala to celebrate its mission, history and accomplishments. Funds raised go to support research, public health initiatives and community education to fight the number one killer of men and women, heart disease.
Zooperbowl sunday
Feb. 3
Nashville Zoo at Grassmere
Before sitting down for the big game on Super Bowl Sunday, come out to the Nashville Zoo for its annual half-price promotion.
sunTrust Classical series: Harmonic Convergence
Feb. 7 – 9
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
John Adams’ riveting Harmonielehre combines the spare design of minimalism with the expressive, all-encompassing sound of late Romanticism to create music that, in the composer’s words, “touches you in the center of your soul.” Shostakovich’s First Cello Concerto, a piece originally written for the great Mstislav Rostropovich and performed here by irrepressible Johannes Moser.
9 to 5: The Musical
Feb. 7 – 23
Larry Keeton Theatre
The side-splitting story of three unlikely friends who scheme to take control of their company and learn there's nothing they can't do, even in a man's world.
Antiques and garden show of nashville
Feb. 8 – 10
Nashville Convention Center
Brings together nationally and internationally renowned experts and more than 150 exhibitors in the fields of antiques, decorative arts and landscape design.
> German Expressionism: Masterworks from the Detroit Institute of Arts Through Feb. 10 Frist Center for the Visual Arts
Event details and ticketing available at
Works featured from the Detroit Institute of Arts’ renowned collection of early twentieth-century German Expressionist paintings, sculptures, prints, and drawings by artists who belonged to the groups known as The Blue Rider (active in Munich) and The Bridge (active in Dresden and Berlin). Contains major works by Wassily Kandinsky, Otto Dix, Max Beckmann, Paula Modersohn-Becker, Franz Marc and Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. Photo Credit: Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. Winter Landscape in Moonlight, 1919. Oil on canvas, 47 ½ x 47 ½ in. Gift of Curt Valentin in memory of the artist on the occasion of Dr. William R. Valentiner’s 60th birthday, Detroit Institute of Arts, 40.58.
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Cabaret
Feb. 14 – Mar. 9
Andrew Johnson Theatre
Take your seat at a bar table, order a little something from your fetching cocktail waitress, & immerse yourself in the musical theatre event of a lifetime. You’re not just at the show, you’re in the show as Tennessee Rep transforms Johnson Theater into 1930s Berlin.
Attitude
Feb. 15 – 17
James K. Polk Theatre
Three of the country’s most dynamic, cutting-edge choreographers combine to create a performance full of entertaining and inspiring contemporary dance. Frequent Nashville Ballet collaborator and winner of the prestigious Choo San Goh Award for Choreography, Gina Patterson will create a new work specifically for Nashville Ballet inspired by the sounds of Music City and highlighting the immense talent permeating Nashville.
The Singing Tortoise
Feb. 16
James K. Polk Theatre
This fun-for-all-ages children’s ballet tells the story of a hunter named Ama who meets a magical singing tortoise in the forest. Ama promises not to tell anyone about the tortoise’s talent, but breaks his word and suffers the consequences.
TRACES
Feb. 19 – 24
Andrew Jackson Hall
Awe-inspiring acrobatics combined with infectious urban energy. Fusing the traditions of circus with the energy of street performance, the artists employ every trick in the book—from music, dance, and illustration to skateboarding, basketball, and high-risk acrobatics—to make a lasting impression.
bank of America pops series: The Chieftains
Feb. 21 – 23
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
The world’s most famous Irish band are celebrating their 50th anniversary this year. Still as vibrant and relevant today as they were five decades ago, The Chieftains use their sparkling, tradition-steeped musicianship to explore fresh new ideas, making the music their own with a style that is as exhilarating as it is definitive.
FEb
It is spring, and little Mole emerges from hibernation to explore the wonders of peaceful life along the riverbank with his new friend, Ratty. Peaceful, that is, until the irrepressible Mr. Toad develops a most unsavory obsession with-motorcars. Not even wise Old Badger can prevent Toad's disastrous dash down the road to ruin, and soon Toad is in jail and Toad Hall is in the hands of Weasels!
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Historic rCA studio b Tours
Ongoing
Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
Tour one of the world's most important and successful recording studios. More than 35,000 songs were brought to life by the Studio B magic, including more than 1,000 American hits, 40 million-selling singles, and over 200 Elvis Presley recordings (by far more than any other studio). Step into the house of the hitmakers and discover the legend of this Music Row landmark.
Event details and ticketing available at
> The Wind In The Willow Feb. 28 – Mar. 24 Nashville Children’s Theatre
nAsHViLLE’s LoCAL FLAVor Goten, 1719 West End Ave. Holland House, 937 Eastland Ave. Jackson’s Bar and Bistro, 1800 21st Ave. S. Jimmy Kelly’s, 217 Louise Ave. Joe’s Place, 2227 Bandywood Dr. Kayne Prime, 1103 McGavock Loveless Café, 8400 Highway 100 Mad Platter, 1239 6th Ave. N. MAFIAoZA’S Pizzeria & Neighborhood Pub, 2400 12th Ave. S. MAmbu, 1806 Hayes St. Margot Café & Bar, 1017 Woodland St. McCabe Pub, 4410 Murphy Rd. Melrose Neighborhood Pub, 2535 Franklin Pike Merchants, 401 Broadway Midtown Café, 102 19th Ave. S. Monell’s Dining & Catering, 1235 6th Ave. N. Nero’s Grill, 2122 Hillsboro Dr. Noshville Delicatessen 1918 Broadway 4014 Hillsboro Circle One Terminal Dr., Term A/B The Palm, 140 Fifth Ave. S. Pancake Pantry, 1796 21st Ave. S. Paradise Trailer Park Resort, 411 Broadway Park Café, 4403 Murphy Rd. Past Perfect, 122 3rd Ave. S. The Patterson House, 1711 Division St. The Pineapple Room at Cheekwood, 1200 Forest Park Dr. PM, 2017 Belmont Blvd. Prince’s Hot Chicken Shack, 123 Ewing Dr. Provence Breads & Café 1705 21st Ave. S. 601 Church St. Puckett’s Gro. & Restaurant, 500 Church St. Rosepepper Cantina, 1907 Eastland Ave.
Ru San’s Sushi and Seafood, 505 12th Ave. S. Rumba Rum Bar and Satay Grill, 3009 West End Ave. Rumours East, 1112 Woodland St. Sambuca, 601 12th Ave. S. The Smiling Elephant, 2213 8th Ave. S. Sole Mio, 311 3rd Ave. S. South Street, 907 20th Ave. S. Sperry’s , 5109 Harding Pike Sportsman’s Grill 1601 21st Ave. S. 5405 Harding Pike Stock-Yard Restaurant, 901 2nd Ave. N. Sunset Grill, 2001 Belcourt Ave. Suzy Wong’s House of Yum, 1515 Church St. Swett’s 2725 Clifton Ave. 2209 Abbott Martin Rd. Taco Mamacita, 1200 Villa Place Tavern, 1904 Broadway Tayst, 2100 21st Ave. S. Tin Angel, 3201 West End Ave. Two Twenty-Two, 222 5th Ave. S. Urban Flats, 610 12th Ave. Urban Grub, 2506 12th Ave S. Valentino’s Ristorante, 1907 West End Ave. Virago, 1126 McGavock St. Watermark, 507 12th Ave. S. Whiskey Kitchen, 118 12th Ave. S. Yellow Porch, 734 Thompson Lane
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
1808 Grille, 1808 West End Ave. Armold’s Country Kitchen, 605 8th Ave. S. Baja Burrito, 722 Thompson Lane Bar Louie, 314 11th Ave. S. Boscos, 1805 21st Ave. S. Bound’ry, 911 20th Ave. S. BrickTop’s, 3000 West End Ave. Broadway Brewhouse 317 Broadway 1900 Broadway 7108 Charlotte Pike 8098 Highway 100 Burger Up, 1203 Paris Ave. Cabana, 1910 Belcourt Ave. Cantina Laredo, 592 12th Ave. S. Café Coco, 210 Louise Ave. Caffe Nonna, 4427 Murphy Rd. Capitol Grille, 231 6th Ave. N. The Catbird Seat, 1711 Division St. ChaChah, 2013 Belmont Blvd. Chago’s Cantina, 2015 Belmont Blvd. City House, 1222 4th Ave. N. Copper Kettle Café 4004 Granny White Pike 94 Peabody St. Crow’s Nest, 2221 Bandywood Dr. Demos’ Steak and Spaghetti House, 300 Commerce St. Eastland Café, 97 Chapel Ave. Edley’s Bar-B-Que, 2706 12th Ave. S. F. Scott’s Restaurant & Jazz Bar, 2210 Crestmoor Rd. Fido, 1812 21st Ave. S. Firefly Grille, 2201 Bandywood Dr. Fish & Co., 2317 12th Ave. S. Flyte World Dining & Wine, 718 Division St. Gabby’s Burgers and Fries, 493 Humphries St. Germantown Café, 1200 Fifth Ave. N.
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XChurch1213AD2:XChurch1011Poster
FROM SCHOOL
OF MUSIC TO MUSIC ROW
beBELMONT.com
Since the early days in his church choir, Rayvon Owen continues to grow as an artist. The Belmont University junior and commercial music major had the honor of being a performer in Belmont’s 2012 Commercial Music Showcase and won the role of Seaweed in Belmont’s production of “Hairspray.” In addition, he is a member of the ensemble Phoenix and is currently writing new material for his upcoming EP. With the church as his foundation, Rayvon strives to reflect the character of Christ. A Christian, musician and seeking positive growth at every opportunity: this is how Rayvon is Belmont.
Christ Church Cathedral SACRED SPACE for the CITY
ARTS SERIES
2012.13 12.13
STAND
OCT 18 - 20
Nathan Laube organist NOV 9
Mark Cabus A Christmas Carol DEC 12 - 14
SCHOOL of MUSIC Bachelor of Arts Major in Music
DEPARTMENT of ART Bachelor of Arts Majors in Art and Art History
Bachelor of Music
Bachelor of Fine Arts Majors in Art Education, Design Communications and Studio Art
Majors in Church Music, Commercial Music, Composition, Music Education, Music with an Outside Minor, Music Theory, Musical Theatre, Performance and Piano Pedagogy
8/9/12
Bachelor of Fine Arts Major in Musical Theatre
DEPARTMENT of THEATRE & DANCE Bachelor of Arts Major in Theatre and Drama
Master of Music Majors in Church Music, Commercial Music, Composition, Music Education, Pedagogy and Performance
Bachelor of Fine Arts Majors in Theatre with an emphasis in Performance, Directing, Production Design or Theatre Education
Icon Writing Workshop FEB 18
Michael Samis cellist MAR 3
BACHanalia 7 MAR 22
For more information, contact the CVPA Office: (615) 460-6408 or WWW.BELMONT.EDU/CVPAMAJORS
Minor in Dance
www.ezellharding.com Go Eagles
Matthew Lewis organist APR 19
celebrating the creative spirit christcathedral.org/sacredspace
www.nerosgrill.com
Nero's Grill NAE adaptation.indd 1
8/15/12 8:50 AM
2:28
You Have More Choices Than You Think Hope Clinic for Women provides men and women with a safe environment for medical care, counsel, and practical support. With most services free of charge, we rely on your generosity to help us grow! Ask us about: • Volunteer Opportunities • In Kind Donations • Financial Support Opportunities • Open Houses
Established in 1983 and equipping people to make healthy choices with unplanned pregnancies, prevention, pregnancy loss and postpartum depression.
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
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nashville Lawn & garden show 2013
Feb. 28 – Mar. 3
Tennessee State Fairgrounds
Tennessee’s premier horticultural event, this show attracts more than 22,000 people annually and is one of the largest gardening shows in the South. The show includes a series of 20 free lectures and more than 250 exhibitors, during the four day event.
Franklin Art scene
Mar. 1
Downtown Franklin
Held the first Friday of every month, a free tour featuring artists and studios with work ranging from handcrafted jewelry to antique prints and original art to mixed media and live music. Wine, refreshments, and live music are often available at the locations.
Cathy Rigby is Peter Pan
Mar. 1 – 3
Andrew Jackson Hall
Tony Award nominee Cathy Rigby takes flight in an all new production of Peter Pan filled with timeless magical moments and a captivating hook. The legend you thought you know is now the adventure you never dreamed possible!
sunTrust Classical series: Mar. 2 Tchaikovsky Meets Techno
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
Equally at home in the concert hall and the nightclub, Mason Bates has made a splash with his cutting-edge music, which incorporates the rhythms and textures of electronic music with vibrant orchestral writing. The Nashville Symphony will be one of the first ensembles in the country to perform his brand-new Violin Concerto, a vehicle for the stunning talents of Anne Akiko Meyers.
shakespeare Allowed!
Nashville Main Library
The Nashville Shakespeare Festival invites you to read every play Shakespeare wrote out loud in a reading circle. Once a month gather to read one of the works of William Shakespeare, beginning with the first play he wrote and ending with his last. Featured work: The Merry Wives of Windsor.
Mar. 2
> Green Day’s American Idiot Mar. 5 – 7 Andrew Jackson Hall
Event details and ticketing available at
Direct from Broadway, the smash-hit musical tells the story of three lifelong friends forced to choose between their dreams and the safety of suburbia. Their quest for true meaning in a post-9/11 world leads them on the most exhilarating theatrical journey of the season. Photo Credit: Jeremy Daniel
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sunTrust Classical series: The red Violin
Mar. 14 – 16
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
Composer John Corigliano adapted his music for the hit film into a concert piece that captures all the passion and drama of his original score. With moments of unabashed romanticism and sparkling energy, along with plenty of virtuoso fireworks, the concerto is a signature piece for Finnish violinist Elina Vähälä.
2013 sEC Men’s basketball Mar. 14 – 17 Tournament
Bridgestone Arena
The winner of the 11-game tournament will receive the league's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The tournament seeds and conference champion will be determined by the 14-game regular-season SEC schedule. The top four seeds earn a first-round bye.
Main street brew Fest
Mar. 16
Downtown Franklin
Celebrate St. Patrick's Day on historic Main Street in Franklin. From food vendors to dance and music, this free festival features all things Irish. At night, enjoy sampling import and specialty beers at the ticketed beer tasting event.
Flashdance
Mar. 19 – 24
Andrew Jackson Hall
Alex Owens, a working-class girl from Pittsburgh with a dream of becoming a professional dancer, works as a steel mill welder during the day & a bar dancer at night. When Alex catches the eye of her boss, Nick Hurley, their romance shows her the meaning of love and drives her ambition to pursue her dream.
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
Mar. 21 – Apr. 6
Larry Keeton Theatre
After two con men living on the French Riviera meet on a train, they realize the small French town isn't big enough for the two of them, so they decide the first one to extract $50,000 from a young female heiress wins – the other must leave town. A hilarious battle of cons ensues, that will keep audiences laughing, humming and guessing to the end!
Mar date
location
description
the silk road ensemble with Yo-Yo Ma
Mar. 23
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
Taking inspiration from the historical Silk Road trading routes, cellist YoYo Ma formed the group to bring together artists and audiences around the globe. Over the course of five albums, these performers have traveled across countries, continents and cultures, changing the way we think about music and the world around us.
suntrust classical series: lord of 'the ring'
Mar. 28 – 30
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
A spectacular symphonic journey through Wagner’s mythical world of heroes and gods, dwarves and giants. Fusing the opera’s main musical ideas into one cohesive whole, this larger-than-life piece takes listeners from the depths of the Rhine to the great hall of Valhalla and into the underground caves of the Nibelung.
eggstravaganzoo and Bunny Breakfast
Mar. 30
Nashville Zoo at Grassmere
Get the kids together, and hip hop over to the Zoo for the 13th annual Eggstravaganzoo featuring egg hunts for children ages 10 and under, prizes, free games, bunny breakfast, and a special visit by the Easter Bunny.
nashville Fashion Week
Mar. 2013
Various Locations
Lexus Nashville Fashion Week is a city-wide celebration of Nashville’s thriving fashion and retail community and its vast array of creative talent - featuring local, regional and national design talent in fashion events and shows, and encouraging both Nashvillians and visitors to explore the city’s diverse fashion and retail spaces throughout the week with promotions, partnerships and educational workshops. Enjoy nightly fashion shows from more than 20 designers.
Event details and ticketing available at
event
> Patsy Cline: Crazy For Loving You Through June 10, 2013 Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
local art Galleries Art and Invention Gallery Arts at the Airport Auld Alliance Gallery BelArt Studio & Gallery Bennett Galleries Blackbird Tattoo and Gallery Blend Studio Brownlee O. Currey, Jr. Gallery at Watkins College of Art and Design Bryant Gallery Centennial Arts Center Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art Cumberland Gallery Estel Gallery Finer Things Gallery Frist Center for the Visual Arts Gallery One Gallery of Andy Anh Gallery Simin
Galleryf @ Scarritt-Bennett HA Gallery at Hanging Around Leiper’s Creek Gallery LeQuire Gallery Leu Art Gallery at Belmont University Local Color Gallery Lost Boys Center and Gallery Metro Nashville Arts Gallery Midtown Gallery Nashville Jazz Workshop Gallery Nashville Public Library Art Gallery O Gallery Picture This On 5th Richland Fine Art, Inc. Richter Gallery of Photography Ronell & Co. Sarratt Gallery at Vanderbilt University Stanford Fine Art Tennessee Art League and Galleries
Tennessee Arts Commission Gallery Tennessee State Museum The Arts Company The COOP The Gallery, Appalachian Center for Craft The Ha Factory The Parthenon The Renaissance Center of The Jackson Foundation The Rymer Gallery Tinney Contemporary Todd Gallery at MTSU TSU Hiran Van Gordon Gallery Twist Two Moon Gallery Vanderbilt University Fine Arts Gallery Williams 19th & 20th Century American Art Galleries Zeitgeist Gallery
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
The tear in her voice. The catch in her throat. These are the signatures of the legendary Patsy Cline. The Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum will pay tribute to this inimitable artist with the cameo exhibition Patsy Cline: Crazy for Loving You, which opens in the Museum's East Gallery on August 24, 2012, and runs through June 2013.
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An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
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Tin pan south
Apr. 2 – 6
Various Live Music Venues
America's largest music festival dedicated to songs and songwriters is held in Nashville. Produced by the Nashville Songwriters Association International, the festival features hundreds of songwriters who perform approximately 100 shows over the course of the week.
bank of America pops series: pink Martini
Apr. 4 – 6
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
Take a rollicking around-the-world musical adventure with these eclectic musical travelers. Pink Martini bring their trademark mix of cabaret, jazz, classic Hollywood musicals and songs from every corner of the globe.
Mule Day
Apr. 4 – 7
Downtown Columbia
A Tennessee tradition since 1840, the festival has grown into a weeklong celebration of the mule. Thousands of visitors take part in activities ranging from working mule and best of breed events, to horse shows, arts and crafts booths, and a flea market. The highlight of the festivities is the Mule Day Parade held on Saturday.
The Magic Flute featuring the nashville symphony
Apr. 11 – 13
Andrew Jackson Hall
Follow the adventures of Prince Tamino and Papageno the Bird Catcher as they set forth to save the captured Princess Pamina. Blends myth, enchantment, and the fight between good and evil to deliver the lifeaffirming message: love conquers all.
> Go, Dog, Go! Apr. 11 – May 19 Nashville Children’s Theatre
Event details and ticketing available at
An innovative adaptation of one of the best-loved books for early readers bursts to life on NCT’s stage in an explosion of movement, a kaleidoscope of color and a circus-wagon load of clowning. Join Red Dog, Blue Dog, Yellow Dog and Green Dog as they bark, scoot, scratch, drive, and howl at the moon. Go, Dog, Go! is an exhilarating celebration of childhood for children of all ages.
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wayne shorter Quartet with the nashville symphony and special guest Esperanza spalding
Apr. 12
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
Legendary saxophonist Wayne Shorter and rising star Esperanza Spalding perform a brand-new concerto by Shorter, a showcase for the phenomenally talented Spalding.
southern women’s show
Apr. 18 – 21
Nashville Convention Center
Fashion shows, cooking demonstrations, beauty tips, health screenings, decorating ideas and personal growth opportunities — all tailored especially for women — as well as celebrity appearances. More than 500 exhibits ranging from boutiques and jewelers to travel destinations and health care professionals and making it the perfect one-stop shop for on-the-go women.
nashville Film Festival
Apr. 18 – 25
Regal Green Hills Stadium 16
Annual mid-Tennessee film event attracts enthusiastic film lovers from the region and has been praised by filmgoers and filmmakers alike for its unique combination of big city film festival atmosphere and southern hospitality. With films crossing all genres from drama, comedy, animation, and family to experimental, foreign, documentaries and short films, the Festival has something for every filmgoer to enjoy.
The Columnist
Apr. 18 – May 4
Andrew Johnson Theatre
For decades, Joseph Alsop was the most powerful journalist in the country: beloved, feared, and courted in equal measure by the Washington social world at whose center he sat. As the country and the world of journalism moved into a time of dizzying changes and drastic shifts, the intense political drama Alsop was embroiled in became deeply personal as well.
rivers & spires Festival
Apr. 18 – 20
Downtown Clarksville
A three day outdoor event that features a night of patriotic tribute to military heroes, seven stages of entertainment, an International Streetfest, International House of Brewers, Kidz Zone, Jazz ‘N Wine area, marketplace, car shows, parades, Quilts of the Cumberland, artz galore and more.
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Rock Of Ages
Apr. 19 – 20
Andrew Jackson Hall
In 1987 on the Sunset Strip, a small town girl met a big city rocker and in LA’s most famous rock club, they fell in love to the greatest songs of the ‘80s. It’s five time 2009 Tony® nominee Rock Of Ages, an arena-rock love story told through the mind blowing, face-melting hits of Journey, Night Ranger, STYX, REO Speedwagon, Pat Benatar, Twisted Sister, Poison, Asia, Whitesnake and many more.
Vanderbilt rites of spring
Apr. 19 – 20
Vanderbilt Alumni Lawn
The Rites of Spring Music Festival is the perfect combinations of warm weather and great music from some of the hottest talents.
2013 go red For women Luncheon
Apr. 26
Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center
Join the American Heart Association and hundreds of area women as they celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Go Red For Women movement with heart-healthy educational activities, "red" makeovers, health screenings and a luncheon with special keynote speakers.
Event details and ticketing available at
EVEnT
> Romeo & Juliet feat. Nashville Symphony Orchestra Apr. 26 – 28 Andrew Jackson Hall Vasterling’s Romeo & Juliet expresses the emotion of Shakespeare’s 400-year-old play through dance and music. This familiar story about animosity between two families, revenge and fatal love is set to a timeless score by Sergei Prokofiev.
Apr. 27
Centennial Park
With over 25,000 participants, 50 live bands, hundreds of cheerleaders, and thousands of spectators, this is one racing event you don't want to miss! Events preceding race day are a kids’ marathon and a two-day expo with more than 60 exhibits.
Franklin Main street Festival
Apr. 27 – 28
Downtown Franklin
The 28th annual Main Street Festival brings more than 200 artisans and crafters, two food courts, four stages, and two carnivals to the historic Public Square and Downtown District of Franklin.
wHErE To HEAr LiVE MUsiC 3rd and Lindsley 12th and Porter 12 South Taproom & Grill Arrington Vineyards B.B. King’s Blues Club Bluesboro Bourbon Street Blues and Boogie Bar Bunganut Pig Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum Dan McGuiness Irish Pub Douglas Corner Café Exit/In F. Scott’s Restaurant and Jazz Bar Foobar Frist Center for the Visual Arts Grand Ole Opry House Grimey’s New and Preloved Music
Hard Rock Café Reverb Room Layla’s Bluegrass Inn Legends Corner Limelight Loews Vanderbilt Hotel Marathon Music Works Margaritaville Nashville Music City Bar & Grill Nashville Palace National Underground Puckett’s Grocery Red Rooster Bar & Music Hall Ri’chard’s Cafe Rippy’s Smokin’ Bar & Grill Robert’s Western World Rocketown Ryman Auditorium Sambuca
Second Fiddle The 5 Spot The Basement The Big Bang Dueling Piano Bar The Bluebird Café The Commodore Grille The End The Family Wash The Fontanel Mansion & Farm The Listening Room Cafe The Loveless Barn The Mercy Lounge and Cannery Ballroom The Pond The Rutledge
An initiative of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee
st. Jude Country Music Marathon & ½ Marathon
The Stage on Broadway The Station Inn Tin Roof Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge Wildhorse Saloon 101
Tribute to Tim McGraw “When you meet the families, the husbands and wives and parents of these guys, you see the relief in their faces, which means the most to me. You see the relief, and you see a little bit of sometimes not thinking they deserve it. For me, that’s the biggest point that I wanted to get across to them is for these guys to never think that they don’t deserve this, because they deserve this and way more. [I want] them to go kick life in the ass. It’s been inspiring to see these guys for sure.” — Tim McGraw
McGraw visits miltary families through Operation Homefront
Country music superstar Tim McGraw recently launched a nationwide program called HomeFront, in partnership with Chase, Outback Steakhouse and Operation Homefront, to award mortgage-free homes to wounded warriors and service members at each concert of his summer tour. In addition to the homes, provided by Chase, both ACM Lifting Lives, the charitable arm of the Academy of Country Music, and The Premier Group on behalf of the North Carolina Furniture Manufacturers, have made substantial contributions to support the HomeFront program throughout the summer. 102
NASHVILLE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
The HomeFront program is an important part of Chase’s commitment to award 1,000 mortgage-free homes over five years. In addition to awarding homes, Chase is working to ensure that service members and veterans successfully transition from the military and lead productive lives by providing education and training resources and helping them find jobs. As a founding member of the 100,000 Jobs Mission, Chase and other coalition companies are working toward the goal of hiring 100,000 transitioning servicemembers and military veterans by 2020.
Marine staff NCO Domenic Delucia and wife, Christina, with McGraw backstage
Janet Ware, Vice President of military and veterans affairs at Chase, Tim McGraw, Army Sgt. Ralph Harroff, and Amy Palmer, chief operating officer, Operation Homefront.
U.S. Army Spc. Dustin Kuberski and wife
U.S. Army Sergeant Ray Nuckoles and his wife, Amanda
Veterans and Operation Homefront staff at a McGraw concert
www.nashvilleartsandentertainment.com
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Mumford & Sons, November 1, 2010
The 2012-13 sEAsON is here!
Presented by
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Presented by
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Presented by tm
October 23-28, 2012
& © 2012 Paramount Pictures and tm & © 2012 The Estate of Irving Berlin. All rights reserved.
November 13-18, 2012 TM a
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January 22-27, 2013
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www.WhiteChristmastheMusical.com
©Disney
Presented by
February 19-24, 2013
March 19-24, 2013
May 7 – June 2, 2013
Plus Broadway specials:
American Idiot, Peter Pan, and Rock of Ages
six-show packages start at just $100! TPAc.ORg/Broadway | 615-782-6560 TPAC Box Office Downtown | Groups call 615-782-4060 Some shows contain mature content.
ROckiN’ NaShville SiNce 1925
Buy Tickets or Book an Event:
wmarocks.com • 615-782-4000 301 6th avenue North | Nashville, TN
NEW! “The Attic Sessions”
are candid documentaries of guest artists playing songs and sharing stories at War Memorial auditorium. visit theatticsessions.com to watch video and find details about artist participation.
It takes the skill of an artist to restore this masterpiece. To the neurosurgeons at Saint Thomas Health, brain surgery is the highest form of art. The Truebeam STX radiosurgery program at Saint Thomas Hospital provides them the tools they need to apply therapeutic radiation with unparalleled pinpoint accuracy. That means renewed hope and improved quality of life to cancer patients.
615-284-LIFE 路 STHS.com
A N N UA L G U I D E
Pictured from left to right: Matthew Harrison Vice President Relationship Manager
Jarrod Grubb Vice President Relationship Manager
Renee Chevalier Vice President Relationship Manager
Rita Mitchell Senior Vice President Private Client Services
Laura Folk Senior Vice President Medical Private Banking
Mary Carlson Vice President Relationship Manager
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POWERING YOUR today a d tomorrow Personal Advantage Banking from First Tennessee. The most exclusive way we power the dreams of those with exclusive financial needs. After all, you’ve been vigilant in acquiring a certain level of wealth, and we’re just as vigilant in finding sophisticated details, your Private Client Relationship Manager will also assemble a team of CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERTM professionals with objective advice, investment officers, and retirement specialists that meet your complex needs for the future.
TO START EXPERIENCING THE EXCLUSIVE SERVICE YOU’VE EARNED, CALL 615-734-6165
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Financial planning provided by First Tennessee Bank National Association (FTB). Investments available through First Tennessee Brokerage, Inc., member FINRA, SIPC, and a subsidiary of FTB. Banking products and services provided by First Tennessee Bank National Association. Member FDIC. ©2012 First Tennessee Bank National Association. www.firsttennessee.com
MIKE WOLFE’S “AMERICAN PICKERS” MOST INTERESTING PEOPLE • PL ACES • THINGS GIVE IT A SWIRL 5 WAYS TO DISCOVER TENNESSEE WINES ABC’S NEXT BIG SHOW?
“NASHVILLE” NowPlayingNashville.com EXCLUSIVE CALENDAR Fall/Winter 2012-2013
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SEVENTH ANNUAL EDITION — Fall / Winter 2012–2013
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